Flak flies over ICANN contract renewal

Daily Newsletters

Sign up to ZDNet UK's daily newsletter.

NEWS
The US Department of Commerce has come under fire for awarding, without a proper tender process, a contract for running the most basic and crucial functions of the Internet to ICANN, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers. Despite widespread criticism over its past performance, ICANN has now looks likely to run the functions of the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) for another three years. The most important functions of IANA include coordinating the root zone of the domain name system, and allocating IP address spaces; functions that are crucial to the stability of the Internet. At the end of January the US Department of Commerce issued a notice of intent to issue ICANN a sole-source, no-cost purchase order to continue its contract to run the functions of IANA. But now two groups are crying foul, saying that other organisations should have had a chance to bid for the contract. The Internet Multicasting Service, a group that bid unsuccessfully for the right to run the .org domain, and Nominet, the .uk country code top-level domain (ccTLD) registry, have both written to the Department of Commerce expressing their dismay about the way the contract was renewed. In an open letter to the Department, Carl Malamud, chairman of IMS, said his organisation -- and many others -- would be better placed to run IANA. "ICANN's performance of the IANA function does not enjoy the support of key constituencies," said Malamud, "and this fractured support threatens the stability, security and reliability of the Internet." Malamud said the Department of Commerce should conduct an open, competitive bidding process to see if other organisations could better promote the stability, security and reliability of the Internet. In particular, said Malamud, the IANA functions are in dire need of updating -- a process that would save costs, and increase productivity of users, registries and industry. Some IANA functions, said Malamud in his letter, are based on technologies that date back 20 years or more. "Unique values are hand-edited into ASCII-based, unstructured text files. No consistency checks are provided, there is no systematic mirroring procedure to make sure that multiple locations all have the same data, and there is no notification procedure to let people know when new values are allocated." IMS would replace this with an XML-based system. But it is the controversy surrounding ICANN that makes it most unsuitable to continue running the IANA functions, said Malamud. "We respectfully submit that the controversy surrounding the non-IANA and IANA-based functions of ICANN has been a huge distraction and threatens the stable and secure operation of the IANA. The interests of the Internet community-at-large, industry, and the clients of the IANA would be best served without this surrounding controversy." In Europe, Nominet does not believe that ICANN could never perform the IANA function acceptably. In his letter to the Commerce Department, Nominet chairman Dr Willie Black said the problem is that ICANN simply has not listened to the concerns of the ccTLD registries. "We have attempted to persuade the management of ICANN to adopt a more lightweight approach, to concentrate their policy discussions on persuasive rather than binding agreements, to separate the funding aspects of policy-making and operations and only to do those minimum functions necessary to give a business efficacy to their technical coordination role," said Black. "Regrettably, ICANN does not appear to have listened to our concerns, which are shared by many other key providers worldwide." Black said the management of the IANA database "must not seek to override the wishes and policies developed in countries outside of the US." He also said the IANA function should be funded and overseen by the TLD managers themselves. "Budgets must be prepared which are acceptable to those paying the funds and, within the contexts of the relative GDPs of ccTLDs' host countries, the payments should be equally spread, since all are receiving the same service." The Council of European National Top-Level Domain Registries (CENTR), is also understood to be making a submission.
For everything Internet-related, from the latest legal and policy-related news, to domain name updates, see ZDNet UK's Internet News Section. Let the editors know what you think in the Mailroom.

Talkback

Someone needs to hire a proofreader at ZDNet.uk (or stop smoking so much weed before articles go to press). This ICANN article is riddled with mistakes, broken links, etc.

via Facebook 30 August, 2006 01:39
Reply

Post your comment

In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.

You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your ZDNet UK account below

  • Login

Will not be displayed with your comment

By signing up for this service, you indicate that you agree to our Terms and Conditions and have read and understood our Privacy Policy. Questions about membership? Find the answers in the Community FAQ

Get ZDNet UK's daily newsletter

Enter your email address to sign up

ZDNet UK Live

Marcus Karlsson

Any update on this, considering the claimed "first week of February"?

26 minutes ago by Marcus Karlsson via Facebook on Archos confirms G9 Ice Cream Sandwich update schedule
apexwm

Bill Goodrich : Just as al_langevin pointed out, with Windows Server 2008 there is no Services for Macintosh anymore. It's gone, not available....

9 hours ago by apexwm on Windows Server 2008 drops the ball for Mac compatibility
txtrainguy

Replying to an old topic that I'm currently facing with my CEO (who is on a Mac). Our servers are primarily Windows Servers, office is about...

15 hours ago by txtrainguy on Windows Server 2008 drops the ball for Mac compatibility
k0tcs3

Sure, that makes perfect sense. Pay wrong-doers money and thank them for breaching your security and pointing out your flaws, that would surely...

16 hours ago by k0tcs3 on US indicts Romanian over NASA climate change hack
Random_Error

I think he's referring specifically to Android apps, as Apple do regulate their App Store, but Google seem to let any old crap onto the Android store!

16 hours ago by Random_Error on RIM: BlackBerry will keep 'garbage' apps out of store
Paul Fezziwig

Keep the crap apps out?! How will they compete with Android and Apple's claim to fame of having so many life changing apps? I wonder if the media...

21 hours ago by Paul Fezziwig via Facebook on RIM: BlackBerry will keep 'garbage' apps out of store
Aigars Mahinovs

It has been shown time after time that if there is an author store that sells the songs at even 1$ per song and gives you a high-quality digital...

22 hours ago by Aigars Mahinovs via Facebook on Copyright isn't working, says European Commission
awbMaven

""As a result of Butyka's alleged conduct, researchers were unable to use the computers for more than two months while NASA removed the malicious...

1 day ago by awbMaven on US indicts Romanian over NASA climate change hack
subhorup

It simultaneously worries me and uplifts me that a self-proclaimed group of internet activists name themselves after Indian mythical figures....

1 day ago by subhorup on Anonymous activists release PCAnywhere source code
naviathan

It's actually far easier to work anonymously on the internet than you think. With tools like Tor bouncing your traffic around the world before...

2 days ago by naviathan on Anonymous activists release PCAnywhere source code
Agnostic_OS

1000272134 and bluedalmatian with you both there but then I'm still in 10.04 land (and happy with it)

2 days ago by Agnostic_OS on Ten factors that make Ubuntu 11.10 a hit
apexwm

Interesting article and definitely see your points on the products mentioned. One of the top products for our Help Desk (approximately 20% of all...

2 days ago by apexwm on Ten flawed products that derail productivity
Paul Hutchinson

Absolutely - this should obviously not be handled my isp - but handled by their hosting operator. What's been suggested here is that my isp police...

2 days ago by Paul Hutchinson via Facebook on MPs urge ISPs to take down terrorist material
Techs UK

Looks like a great phone. I don't notice any deficiencies in WP7. used IOS before, that's pretty good. I don't spend much time in Apps, all i need...

2 days ago by Techs UK on Nokia pins US 're-entry' hopes on Lumia 900
Larry Bloggy

Now with the help of these apps you are always synced with MS outlook while on the move. Just download apps like xobni or outlookreflex and get...

2 days ago by Larry Bloggy via Facebook on Outlook Social Connector beta 2 and the LinkedIn connector
mike40g123

Your details are wrong. The version currently being made is the one with 2 USB ports, 256MB RAM and a network port. This is the Model B. The...

2 days ago by mike40g123 on Raspberry Pi boards set to go on sale
Moley

The thing that has been puzzling me for quite a while is how Anonymous can remain anonymous whilst not only being active on the Internet but also...

3 days ago by Moley on Anonymous activists release PCAnywhere source code
Don Dilly

If what Semantec is saying is rue, that is even worse and shows a complete disregard for thier users. If what Anonymous claims is true and the...

3 days ago by Don Dilly via Facebook on Anonymous activists release PCAnywhere source code
MattChurchy

Didn't seem particularly biased to me either. Oh though you might have mentioned some other competitors with free search and email services...

3 days ago by MattChurchy on Time for an evil umpire: Google, Microsoft & privacy
Simon Bisson and Mary Branscombe

James - exactly as much as anyone paid you for your comment; I don't feel that I need to say that I'm independant and unbiased, but just for you...

3 days ago by Simon Bisson and Mary Branscombe on Time for an evil umpire: Google, Microsoft & privacy