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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
ICANN still rules the Net

By Lisa M. Bowman, Special to ZDNet
September 24, 2002
URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/business/soa/ICANN-still-rules-the-Net/0,139023166,120268480,00.htm


The governance of the Internet remains in the hands of ICANN, but the organisation has been ordered to be more transparent.

As expected, the US Commerce Department has extended for one more year its contract with the organisation that governs the Internet's infrastructure.

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) was granted another extension to oversee the administration of domain names -- the third expansion of an agreement originally struck in 1998.

The agreement requires closer government oversight of ICANN and more transparency in the organisation's plans and actions. Government officials have said this is a crucial year for the organisation. Critics have accused ICANN of unnecessary secrecy and failing to include the public in its decisions.

ICANN said the renewal underscores the government's goal of private-sector management of the Internet as the organisation responds to concerns about its reorganisation and handling of Web addresses.

"The continued cooperation and support of the Department of Commerce will allow ICANN to complete its ongoing reform processes and to resume progress towards its stated goals," ICANN chief executive M. Stuart Lynn said in a statement.

The controversial organisation has had an exceptionally rocky year. ICANN has come under fire for several recent actions, including a reform plan that involved the elimination of publicly elected board members and its process of selecting a successor to run the .org domain when VeriSign relinquishes control. ICANN was also successfully sued by one of its own board members, who won the right to review documents ICANN tried to keep under wraps.

Some ICANN critics have called on the Department of Commerce not to renew the contract, but that would have required creating or designating another body to do ICANN's work.


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