Dyson on ICANN 8
NeuroUk writes "THere is another article on open democracy with Esther Dyson about ICANN - and where it all went wrong. ;-)"
Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (10) Sorry, but that's too useful.
Wont work (Score:1)
To elaborate... (Score:1)
"The net is rule-governed space as well as dynamic technology and business medium. But who wrote the rules? An ICANN pioneer tells the story of how the net community harnessed political imagination to create its own forms of governance, and asks: can a global civil society now emerge, with political parties to help make that governance accountable?"
Re:To elaborate... (Score:1)
the net is chaos
link location shows bias (Score:2)
All this strife over mere names (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:All this strife over mere names (Score:2, Insightful)
Even phone numbers can be vitally important to some companies because of their mnemonic value. There's a mattress company that floods drive-time news radio in my area with a jingle singing their mnemonic toll-free number. (I sat on a U.S. standards committee in the late 80s when it received an earnest request from a pizzeria to standardize the location of the "Z" key on the telephone keypad to "0" so that he could have advertisae his toll-free phone number as 800-##-PIZZA. I am NOT making this up.) The telephone companies can't really profit from assignment of phone numbers, either, but they can handle requests and wait-lists for neat ones without too much hassle.
Marketing telephone numbers is a game of mnemonics or repetition ("That's 555-3770. Remember: 555-3770.") What I think is missing is what you need when you somehow ("Don't forget: 555-3770") the telephone number: the telephone directory. If I somehow forget the phone number of the local automobile glass repair shop ("Call 555-3770" now!) I can look it up in the telephone book.
How do I get to the web site for my local automobile glass repair shop? I'm very likely to forget what it was called--unless it's nice and simple--without having to spend time looking it up with limited search tools or directories. This is why domain names are so valuable for web-enabled companies.
[I also think opening up the TLD space more quickly would help--but that's another topic.]
Decentralized - Centralized roots (Score:2)
Ok, it probably doesn't make much sense, but it should. ICANN's job should be to manage the rootm servers end of story. Is the power on? Yes, good we did our job today. They should be a non-profit organization paid by domain registration fees to keep the power on. Then the registration should be openned up so anyone can act as a registrar of domain names or any and every common TLD, with perhaps the exception of ccTLD's the managers of which should act as mini-Icann's for their country. DNS management should be combined with domain name registration management, and route publishing as well. A simple web interface mansged by ICANN could ben be used to check or the existance of a name, registration of a name, attaching DNS servers to that domain, and then the DNS server does the rest. Domain disputes...gone I got it first I keep it...