>> FWIW I very much doubt the vanity TLD madness will continue long >> > enough for the root zone grow to anywhere like that size: maybe a few >> > thousand new TLDs at most.
i've already shared what little i know on that subject. > never underestimate the greed of a bunch of lawyers, and that is what > drives icann. in 2003 the protocol supporting organization (pso) surrendered all voting seats to the icann board. in 2010 the non-voting rump of the abandoned pso, the technical advisory group, was reviewed for its necessity and utility. the evaluation was broadly negative. i suggest that (a) one recognizes that there was policy-based admission to the iana root in 2001 and 2004, and this policy was amended to include an alternative capitalization test in 2007, by the generic policy making bylaws entity (the gnso), and that in 2008 and subsequent, the board (see "votes" supra) abandoned the policy-based admission alternative, and (b) one recognizes that in anglo-saxon (or anglo-american if you prefer, but the european (ex-uk) expression is "anglo-saxon") legal culture the post-war period has seen the near total dominance of the "law and economics" (aka "chicago school") critical framework -- which i'll reduce to the phrase "the market (capitalization test) is the only possible source of policy". so while "greed" is a reasonable individual and collective perjuritive of practitioners, it misses the point of what is taught, in econ courses, b-schools, j-schools (e.g., milton), and law schools, _in_ the us and its equivalent of "the pink bits" (old reference to british empire as denoted on schools wall maps). missing that, it misses the tension between european (ex uk) participants in network policy and pricing, and anglo-saxon participants. the first may have policy denominated in a currency other than dollars (or euros), the later must not*. so, when looking to "what drives icann", it would be, i claim, a useful thing to start with ira magazineer's choice, under one of a series of administrations which any good administrative law reference (e.g., fox) will characterize as "deregulatory", to place most of the control of "policy" in the "market", which is to say, the incumbent monopoly operator, creating the (realized) possibility of agency capture. having decided what to allow as a basis for policy, e.g., admission by capitalization, admission by arms, admission by utility for a class of persons, ... one can look to the necessity and utility of "non-lawyers" (generally, parties not beneficiaries of the admission by capitalization regime, which includes most civil law practitioners, e.g., the newly appointed independent objections party, and the "public interest" subset of common law practitioners), in particular, the "ops community" not fatally conflicted by employer benefit under the monopoly-or-plutocracy regime. the policy making can be modified -- the green and white papers imagined that monopoly conditions would be relaxed over time, a fact not in evidence beyond the 7% of the incumbent monopolist's market transferred, and the 7% of the market created over a decade by third parties, and a dozen marginal, or subsidized, nominally competitive new operators. the green and white papers imagined that "agency capture" would not take place (viz the competition policy goal), and that policy alternatives to capitalization as the sole admissions test would continue to meaningfully exist, and that a property interest in delegations (contracts renewable under non-fictive conditions) would not arise. i think i've written in invisible electrons long enough. i'm wicked underwhelmed by this collection of threads. -e * cornell law, where my partner just graduated from, is one of the few "policy" (t13 for those in the trade) law schools where law and economics is merely one framework among many. elsewhere it is received wisdom, except where critical economic theory is still taught in econ schools, e.g., berkeley. _______________________________________________ dns-operations mailing list [email protected] https://lists.dns-oarc.net/mailman/listinfo/dns-operations dns-jobs mailing list https://lists.dns-oarc.net/mailman/listinfo/dns-jobs
