ENN - Electric News.net
Free e-mail alerts & newsletter - Sign up here
Free e-mail alerts & newsletter - Sign up here
Edit your alerts
News
   CORRECTIONS
Survey
Let us know how to make ENN better!
Take our reader's survey.
 
National Digital Media Awards
UTV Internet - all Ireland flat rate internet access
Face-to-Face: Danuta Gray, CEO O2 Ireland
On the job for 18 months, Danuta Gray has presided over Digifone's transformation into O2 Ireland, with the brand celebrating its first birthday this month. But that challenge was miniscule compared to future trials, which include 3G, adding customers in a maturing market and even wireless LANS. Matthew Clark spoke face-to-face with Gray to get the inside story on her and on O2 Ireland.
More here

 

The following e-mail will be sent on your behalf.

 has sent the following story to you from ElectricNews.net.

The story is available from https://electricnews.net/news.html?code=5703826

Domain operators want service from ICANN
Friday, January 18 2002
by Matthew Clark


A number of European top-level domain registrars are refusing to pay ICANN, the
non-profit organisation that administers policy for the Internet name and address
system.



CENTR, the Council of European National Top-Level Domain Registries, is an
association of organisations that control many of Europe's county specific domain
name registries such as .ie in Ireland, .uk in Britain and .it in Italy.
Many of these registries are considering not paying the Internet Corporation for
Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) the donations it is requesting, saying the
Internet oversight body has not done enough to guarantee the stability of the
servers and databases that link domains. Essentially, the complaints stem from
ICANNs unwillingness to sign contracts with the Internet's 13 root server
operators to guarantee system reliability.
At the CENTR General Assembly, held last month, CENTR's 35 members, who include
the Irish (.ie) registration body IEDR, pressed ICANN about the quality of
service they can expect from the non-profit Californian corporation. At the
meeting Dr. William Black, chairman of CENTR, said "There are many issues to
be resolved and we currently appear to be far from a mutual understanding."
Black, who is also Nominet's (.uk) managing director, says, "Our main concern
is over what the role of ICANN is. We think that ICANN should be willing to offer
some level of service assurance in what it does, they don't agree."
The Internet's 13 root servers essentially tell one domain how to reach another
domain and unless these servers and the databases of IP addresses they contain
are functioning properly, users would unable to move from one domain to another.
Separate companies operate these servers, an if one were to fail the Net as a
whole would continue to operate, but disruptions could be caused in certain
areas.
For now there remains no guarantee from ICANN that the severs, which are also run
by volunteers, will remain in operation without interruption and the US
non-profit oversight body says it is not in the business of providing services
agreements. ICANN also points out that the system has been in operation, without
disruption for 15 years and that it can't force volunteer server operators to
guarantee service without paying. Black says CENTR members would be willing to
pay for service level agreements.
Black says that there is also demand for ICANN to keep track of who the 250 ccTLD
(country code top level domain) registration managers are, but without any
authority over what the local administrators do, ICANN seems reluctant to take on
such as task.
"We are not going to sue them, there would not be much point in not-for-profit
companies suing each other. But we do need some kind of more commercial
agreement. If ICANN can not guarantee reliability of the system what good are
they?" Black asked. "It seems ridiculous though; if our system went down we
could be sued by the thousands of organisations we do business with. Why
shouldn't they (ICANN) do the same."

Black explained that there were a number of other issues at stake as well. These
include recognition the sovereign right of the local Internet community in each
CENTR country to manage its own ccTLD, with no authority conceded to ICANN by any
CENTR member on the management of any ccTLD. Also, most European administrators
desire to participate in any policy formulation or restructuring activities by
ICANN, while retaining local policy implementation.

This is not the first instance that CENTR members and ICANN have butted heads, In
June of 2000 CENTR responded to invoices issued to ccTLD registries for the ICANN
financial year 99/00. Its complaints in 2000 were contained in letter sent to the
ICANN chief executive officer at the time, Mike Roberts.

Despite the complaints two years ago, CENTR members "donated" around USD600,000
to ICANN for the year ending 30 June 2000. Last year the UK and Germany made
another, smaller donation of around USD100,000 apiece but for the current year,
there is some question as two whether any donation will be made unless some of
these issues are rectified.

"I don't want to seem to aggressive on this. We might pay them something in the
long run out of a sense of responsibility. Many of the governments in Europe feel
that way. But I just keep asking myself what are we paying them for?" Black
said. "We have been patient on this thing for a long time. I hope there is some
progress soon, but we are prepared to wait longer, the Internet will not shut
down tomorrow."
The past 12 months have not been the best for ICANN which introduced seven new
top-level domains (.museum, .biz, .info, .aero, .name, .coop and .pro). But these
new suffixes, and the companies that administer them, have been caught up in a
series of delays and setbacks including legal disputes over intellectual property
rights and other technical issues.



Search

Weekly Digest
Read a roundup of the top tech stories with our Weekly Digest .


Jobs
Aztech

Powered by The CIA

 

© Copyright ElectricNews.Net Ltd 1999-2002.