BWG DISPUTES ICANN�S DOMAIN NAME COMPETITION CLAIMS

(Boston, April 23, 1999) The Boston Working Group (BWG) today
challenged ICANN's claim that it had opened up the domain name
registration market to competition. The group also criticized
the
contract ICANN has imposed upon its registrars, noting that it
requires domain name registrants to sacrifice essential rights
when
applying for a domain name. �We see a lot of centralization of
power
and lots of regulation in the ICANN plan, but very little new
competition,� said Dr. Milton Mueller, a Syracuse University
professor
and member of the group.

COMPETITION, OR REGULATED MONOPOLY?
The ICANN proposal, released Wednesday, accredits five new
companies
to register domain names in the ".com" ".net" and ".org"
top-level
domains.

Despite ICANN's claims that this will bring competition to the
domain
name market, Network Solutions, Inc. (NSI) retains its monopoly
over
the crucial database of registered names. The plan does not
authorize
new database administrators or new TLDs, and contains no
measures to
transfer ownership of the �.com,� �.net� and �.org� databases.
The
five new companies must pay NSI a one-time fee of $10,000, plus
$9 per
year for every name they register.

Thus, the so-called "new competition" is nothing but an
agreement to
resell entries in NSI's registration database at a price
regulated by
the US government. Prior to the ICANN plan, hundreds of
registrars
were already reselling NSI names, at a higher price.

BWG member David Schutt, network manager at Speco, Inc.,
questioned
the significance of the ICANN initiative: "is competition
between
McDonalds franchises meaningful in a world where the only
hamburger
available is a McDonalds hamburger?"

Dr. Mueller, an expert in telecommunications regulation, noted
that
the US Commerce Department 's National Telecommunications and
Information Administration was responsible for setting NSI's
compensation at $9/yr. per name. The NTIA, Mueller claimed,
�seems to
be imposing a cost-plus, utility regulation model upon the core
functions of the Internet. I don�t understand why NTIA is opting
for
price regulation when it could simply open the market to new
players
and allow customers to have real alternatives. Besides, NTIA
lacks the
experience, the competence, and the legal authority to engage in

economic regulation of Internet name services.�

Most members of the BWG group believe that real competition in
domain
name service will come only with the addition of new top-level
domains
administered by registries other than NSI. Alternative TLDs have

already been proposed for several years, but the US government
has not
allowed them to be entered into the root server databases.
ICANN's
plan to offer shared access to a monopoly registry fails to
create the
kind of product and service differentiation that competition
among new
registration authorities will bring.

ERODING THE RIGHTS OF DOMAIN NAME HOLDERS
The primary effect of the new plan is not to increase
competition in
domain name registration, but to give ICANN the power to
regulate
domain name registrars and domain name holders by creating a
uniform
and centralized registrar accreditation contract.

Press reports about the ICANN plan completely overlooked the
significance of the registrar accreditation contract, which can
be
viewed at http://www.icann.org/registrar_agreement.html. All
service
providers accredited by ICANN must force their customers to sign
away
important legal rights�including rights the courts have already
granted to domain name holders.

Registrars or registries can cancel or take back the domain name

registration whenever they please, and all goodwill or business
presence created in that name would be lost.

The contract allows ICANN to develop a list of excluded names
sometime
in the future, and authorizes ICANN to refuse to re-register any
name
that shows up on that list�once again threatening a domain name
holder�s goodwill and business presence.

Those who wish to register domain names must also make a legally

binding promise that the domain name doesn't interfere with
anyone
else's possible rights in the name -- something that even domain
name
lawyers often can't ascertain.

"It's difficult to understand what ICANN is trying to achieve
with
this requirement," said Mikki Barry, BWG member and intellectual

property lawyer. "Even in the best of worlds, it often takes a
court
to decide whether others have rights in any given claimed
intellectual property."

The BOSTON WORKING GROUP is an independent alliance of Internet
technology professionals, lawyers, policy analysts, and
academics.
The BWG submitted a bylaws proposal for a new non-profit
corporation
to administer Internet domain names and addresses, and its
submission
played a key role in opening up ICANN to membership and public
input.
Several BWG members now serve on the ICANN Membership Advisory
Committee and the Independent Review Advisory Committee.

Contacts:
Dr. Milton Mueller (East coast)
Syracuse University School of Information Studies
315-443-5616 [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Ellen Rony (West coast)
Phone:  415/435-5010 (days) or 415/435-1401 (evenings)
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

David Schutt (Central)
(847) 678-4240 days
(708) 484-5063 evenings


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