COMPUTERGRAM INTERNATIONAL: APRIL 21 1999

GIP Nears ICANN Pledge Drive Target

By Nick Patience

The fundraising effort on behalf of the Internet Corporation
for Assigned names and Numbers (ICANN) has now gathered pledges
totaling $400,000, according to officials from the Global
Internet Project (GIP) yesterday. The GIP is a group of senior
executives from companies interested in the development of the
internet that launched a pledge drive for the non-profit body
back in November, limiting contributions to one per company
with a ceiling of $25,000 and a target of $500,000.

However the GIP effort is only part of the ICANN fundraising
work going on right now. ICANN president Mike Roberts told us
in February that the body would need a total of about $1.1m to
get it through to June this year. Earlier in February, Vint
Cerf, the co-inventor of TCP/IP and internet guru and GIP
member started another pledge drive within the community
looking for $1m-$2m. ICANN is due to set a budget when its
board meets in Berlin at the end of May, which should make the
financial side of ICANN's operation a lot clearer.

GIP and IBM executive Mike Nelson said yesterday that not all
the $400,000 has actually been paid in by the pledges yet. He
now says there is a ceiling of $50,000 per company - MCI
Worldcom Inc and its subsidiary UUNet technologies Inc have
already pledged $25,000 apiece, which made a nonsense of the
earlier $25,000 ceiling claim. The ceiling is an attempt to
avoiding capture by any one organization and an indication to
those companies that do contribute that it will not buy them
influence over ICANN's policy direction. GIP members met with
ICANN chairman Esther Dyson on Monday and discussed pans to
raise money from other entities outside ICANN, but didn't give
details.

The group also met with three members of the World Bank to
discuss ways of increasing funds to less-developed counties to
encourage the spread of the net. The GIP also announced a
workshop in September in Brussels to examine the progress of
Next Generation Internet (NGI) efforts. The GIP had been
expected to announce the findings of a report in the internet
in Asia, but the group said it wanted to "beef up the report a
little" and do a little bit more analysis before launching it.
However, it did says that it is "quite bullish on Asia."

The GIP reiterated its opposition to privacy legislation but
said that laws would probably needed in the area of internet
taxation, which is a fairly non-controversial statement. It
will be actively promoting the Platform for Privacy Preferences
(P3P) as a privacy tool once it has been through the mill at
the W3C and is working on a paper with MIT on personal data
privacy. The GIP intends to remodel its web site to become an
"internet policy portal." Australian telco Telstra Ltd and
Deustche Bank are the GIP two newest recruits.
http://www.gip.org

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