LONDON, Friday
Some
came in suits, some came in stilettos, and some came in sci-fi
t-shirts, but together they could shape the future of the Internet.
In
a London hotel, over 3,300 technicians, government representatives,
academics and members of the domain name industry gathered this week for
the largest ever meeting of the powerful body that runs the Internet's
key infrastructure: the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and
Numbers (ICANN).
Its name is one of numerous acronyms that can make the world of the Internet's managing forces seem impenetrable to outsiders.
But
its policies are of enormous importance, deciding what addresses like
.com, .org or .fr exist, and who has the right to use them.
Over
the last two years, ICANN has overseen the highest ever expansion of
these generic Top-Level Domains -- it awarded .catholic to the Vatican,
but opted to give .amazon to the South American region rather than the
online business.
It must balance the demands of myriad
corporations, interest groups and governments, eking out compromises to
ensure the system sticks to one set of rules and does not split into
regional 'internets'.
To this end, ICANN is trying to
transform itself from an institution overseen by the US government into a
globally representative body -- and some say now is the time to change
how it is run.
"ICANN's procedures highlight its
inability to take into account the legitimate concerns of states," the
French delegation to ICANN said in a statement Wednesday.
"Today ICANN is not the appropriate forum to discuss Internet governance."
The
attack followed a standoff over the .wine and .vin domains, which
France believes should be legally protected, in a similar way to how the
European Union limits who can use the drink label 'Champagne'.
ICANN's
leadership dismisses the French characterisation that it is opaque and
lacks accountability, contending that it is a pioneer in transparency
that needs little advice from governments.
"When I
prepare a draft budget, let alone a draft plan, even before it's vetted
by my leaders it's put on the Internet for anyone to comment on," said
Jean-Jacques Sahel, ICANN's Vice President of Stakeholder Engagement for
Europe.
"Tell me what corporation, international
organisation or government consults on its draft budget and draft plans
at such a detailed level?"
- Strange contraption -
ICANN's
complex and unusual structure grew out of the peculiarities of the
early Internet, when its core job was done by just one man: Jon Postel, a
California computer scientist known as the 'God of the Internet'.
"It's
a strange contraption. It's a private corporation but it's making
public policy," said Milton Mueller, a professor at the Syracuse
University School of Information Studies who has worked in ICANN's
decision-making process.
"It's like what Winston Churchill said about democracy -- it's the worst system apart from all the others."
Its
board of 21 directors is partly appointed by an independent committee,
and is split between various stakeholders and industry bodies, with
governments and 'Internet users' represented by a board member each.
Decisions
are made through 'rough consensus', according to which suggestions that
are put to ICANN are developed into a report by a committee, which is
then put out for public review, and discussed and revised until a
consensus is reached, or as a last resort the board decides.
Currently
under debate: the question of who should have access to the contact
details of anyone who registers a website domain name -- currently
searchable through a system called Whois.
Police,
governments and copyright lawyers, not to mention journalists, have a
huge interest in the data, and it raises obvious questions about
privacy.
But the technical nature of the issues at stake can be an obstacle.
A
Japanese promotional video for the .jp domain name manager JPRS made
light of the problem, featuring an employee who brings on instant
narcolepsy to all who overhear him describe his job.
"Those
jargons might put you to sleep but this job is really important," he
tells a sufferer of chronic insomnia, who promptly slips into
unconsciousness.
It has more than a grain of truth. In
the middle of a press conference to explain the importance of ICANN's
50th meeting, the chairman of its board slipped into a gentle slumber at
the podium.
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