We're experimenting with posting working questions directly to the lists and following and joining the discussion threads there. ICANN needs a viable long-term funding structure. Charges to registries or a tax on registrants offer one option; membership fees have been suggested as another possibility. For individual membership, what fee or fee structure, if any, would be acceptable and reasonable? Regardless of its policy toward individual members, If ICANN accepted corporate members, should it charge them fees? Finally, if ICANN adopts inclusive membership criteria and a web-based registration, could a minimal fee -- say $5 or $10 -- be useful to discourage multiple registrations? For more information on the Berkman Center study, please visit http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/rcs/ . We are also working out details of the January 23 workshop in Cambridge. If you are interested in participating, either in person or electronically, please register at http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/rcs/sign-up.html . --Wendy Seltzer Wendy Seltzer Berkman Center for Internet & Society 617-496-0089 Harvard Law School, Cambridge, MA 02138 [EMAIL PROTECTED] || [EMAIL PROTECTED] Representation in Cyberspace: http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/rcs/ __________________________________________________ To receive the digest version instead, send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] To SUBSCRIBE forward this message to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To UNSUBSCRIBE, forward this message to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Problems/suggestions regarding this list? Email [EMAIL PROTECTED] ___END____________________________________________
