
ICANN Eliminates Karl Auerbach's Seat 236
BrianWCarver writes "SiliconValley.com carries an AP report by Anick Jesdanun indicating that ICANN has given Karl Auerbach the boot by eliminating his seat as well as the four other publicly elected seats on ICANN's board. ICANN is the internet's key oversight body, managing the Top-Level Domains (TLDs). You may recall from this previous Slashdot story that Auerbach is the director who successfully sued ICANN to receive access to their records without having to sign a Non-Disclosure Agreement. 'Though soon leaving the ICANN board, Auerbach vows to keep complaining. And he leaves with no regrets -- he'd do it again.' It'll now be up to organizations like ICANNWatch to keep an eye on ICANN for the public. Is that good enough?'"
not good enough. (Score:4, Insightful)
Obviously not.
Re:not good enough. (Score:2)
Re:not good enough. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:not good enough. (Score:4, Insightful)
it took ICANN some ludicous amount of time (10 months? a year+) after karl asked for the general ledger to invent "procedures" that he would have to submit to before they'd hand it over. the procedures they finally came up with would have forced him to sign away his rights and, worse, would have forced him to agree in advance to NOT fulfill his dury as a director if he had found anything possibly illegal.
karl neither intended nor said he intended to publish anything. that was a canard that ICANN's staff and lawyer (who's not accredited to practice in california) concocted, then clung to with the full fury of delusion, because they believed karl was the devil incarnate. and the proof is in the pudding: they got slammed in court, he was granted access to enormous amounts of material, and -- mysteriously -- he didn't publish it.
Re:not good enough. (Score:2)
I am inclined to agree only partially. I believe the story goes he DID initially request financial information and was REFUSED. Later, when he continued to press his case, it was then that they came up with the idea that he'd have to sign a NDA.
I believe ICAAN has a problem of many boards and management. Management (Lynn), IMHO, is running over the board. The management is to MANAGE the institution. NOT make the policy, which it seems has continually been done. As far as the financial information, it should be made PUBLIC. The only thing an institution in a position such as ICAAN should be able to retain as private should be individual salary and pay data (which should be divulvged as an aggregate) of those some 'n' levels under the senior management. Also private should be any data pertaining to legal actions in which ICAAN may be involved as such disclosure could impact any pending litigation. Other than that, they should be as transparent as glass. They have gotten away with things in the past but with the cry for transparancy and the 'enron mood', that may well be difficult in the future. However, they seem to feel they are not accountable to anyone, so it'll probably take an act of Congress (literally) to get anything done.
Re:not good enough. (Score:4, Interesting)
So where will he sit now? (Score:4, Funny)
Nice to see... (Score:5, Funny)
Ahhh, the good ol' days, when the Internet was young, and closed to only the educated, and information was free to anyone who could pay tuition or get a grant/scholarship... all this open and free sharing of information, regardless of the IQ of the participant. I'm tellin' ya, we never should have let the stupid vote.
Dirty peasants!</sarcasm>
Re:Nice to see... (Score:4, Funny)
Nope - closing it to the educated is what they're trying to do now... :-)
Cheers,
Ian
Re:Nice to see... (Score:3, Funny)
You'll have to forgive me, English is my second language. My first language is tard.
Re:Nice to see... (Score:3, Funny)
Electronic Commerce is bad for my teeth!?
Re:Nice to see... (Score:2)
Maybe I'm just arrogant, but is it so difficult to ask that some things--like the Internet--be restricted to someone who can understand it on at least a basic level?
C'mon, how many "me too"-ers can you stand before the urge to go postal overwhelms?
A basic competency test isn't too much, is it? We require it for cars, why not for computers?
Re:Nice to see... (Score:2)
the corruption and self-dealing that plagues
ICANN, of which this move is a sign?
Re:Nice to see... (Score:2)
Is this a pun?
Dave Farber's Gonna Plotz (Score:5, Informative)
-carl
Not good enough (Score:4, Insightful)
No, I think it should be open sourced and made freely available under the GPL.
</zealot>
Re:Not good enough (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Not good enough (Score:2)
New Job (Score:5, Funny)
Re:New Job (Score:2)
Hmmm (Score:4, Interesting)
#1. The story makes it seem as if the seats were removed because of the trouble he was causing them. If that is the case, why did they eliminate the other seats.
#2. How many "publically elected" seats are left? The story just says they eliminated 5 without elaborating.
#3. Other than through public election, how does one get a seat on ICANN?
Re:Hmmm (Score:4, Informative)
3, be a friend of Stuart Lynn (President and CEO, and acts like he is Mr. ICANN), or the US Dept of Commerce.
Re:Hmmm (Score:5, Insightful)
None. ICANN seems to have decided that having directors who were elected by the net population at large was interfering with their nice, cozy, corrupt way of doing things. Auerbach was only the most obvious example of this.
Re:Hmmm (Score:5, Informative)
Because the other seats are sources of potential trouble.
#2. How many "publically elected" seats are left? The story just says they eliminated 5 without elaborating.
None. From the summary: "...ICANN has given Karl Auerbach the boot by eliminating his seat as well as the four other publicly elected seats on ICANN's board."
It's mostly the other way around (Score:4, Insightful)
Karl? Cantankerous? (Score:3, Interesting)
Good Enough? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Good Enough? (Score:3, Insightful)
Inertia. ICANN has been in charge for so long it's going to be damn hard to overcome that.
Re:Good Enough? (Score:2, Offtopic)
If that is true then you can't have a website without doing bussiness with them. They also own all the ip addresses. If you form a website how can (icann speak)customers oops I mean users connect to it? If your server isn't listed in the master dns boxes then your site does not exist. Also even if you could go register your website in the main dns servers, someone could go to icann and register your ip address. After this anyone typing your url would be redirected to the other internet user who just purchased your ip address. This assumes of course that the other user registered a site with your IP.
Sadly, bussinesses think they own the web and most of the time users just ignore them. However i think the bussinesses are right. Its their's. The net is no longer viewed as public domain but is more viewed as a way to make money or extend commerce. Everything from the backbone of the net itself, to the routing equipment, to the isp's, to ICANN are all owned by corporations. Even colleges outsource to various isp's. Academia no longer has the pressence it once had. Who owns the internet? The government, the people, or a cartel ?
Its up to ICANN to make the most amount of money as possible. Its a bussiness and the internet is soley a bussiness model. If they are public then they have to grow anyway possible to satisfy the shareholders. They already charge more per ip address since the supply is going down and they encourage customers to buy in bulk to limit supply even farther. I but they will throw a fit if IP version 6 ever becomes standard for this reason.
Re:Good Enough? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Good Enough? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Good Enough? (Score:3, Informative)
And ICANN is not really a bussieness like you are thinking, it is a non-profit corperation for the "public good". Sort of like the corperation for public broadcasting.
You need unique identifiers. (Score:3, Informative)
The need for unique identifiers.
How do you do an internet if:
- A particular IP address may map to different hosts. (Packets addressed to 64.28.67.150 go to www.slashdot.org according to ICANN, a Microsoft server according to Joe's Nameservice and Grill, the US Army Recruiter according to the MIL BGP servers, and the local kindergarden according to a router configured by a junior high student. Which authority - and thus which route - do you think a commercial ISP (PAID to deliver packets) will honor?)
- A particular domain name may map to different organizations. (joe_user@slashdot.org may go to joe at VALinux, joe at Microsoft world headquarters, joe at the draft board, joe at the local kindergarden,
- A particular protocol number may specify different protocols. (WHICH IPV4 are you talking about? Which SMTP? Which NFS?)
- A "well known port" may perform different functions. (Imagine a new Microsoft OS putting a webserver up on port 414, or whatever port is used for an important service in the latest competing OS, and configuring the next release of Internet Explorer to try that port first. No need to "embrace" and "extend" before getting to "extinguish".)
and so on, depending on which organization the owner of any particular machine is affiliated with?
The answer is: You don't. (It's like the street addresses, state names, and personal names being a matter of political debate and faction-fighting - while someone's trying to send you a letter.)
Assigning a unique name or number is an indivisible transaction. In the absense of a solution to the "distributed update" problem you HAVE to do that with a single-point mechanism - an "authority". The best solution yet found is delegation - which is what ICANN does with domain naming and selling blocks of IP numbers.
Which brings up the question: Why are domain names handled by ICANN, rather than the trademark/servicemark section of the Patent and Trademark office?
Re:You need unique identifiers. (Score:4, Insightful)
ICANN only does domain names. IP addresses are handled by IANA. I've heard exactly zero complaints about IANA.
The only reason ICANN is in charge is because they run the 13 root DNS servers, which everyone has their dns servers set to look at. All we would have to do to get rid of ICANN is convince virtually everyone to look at a different set of root servers. Much harder than it sounds, but possible (though improbable).
As for why dns is not handled by the PTO, with how badly they handle patents, I'm glad they don't have anything to do with DNS.
So what's so hard about this? (Score:2)
Hint: they're both messy and ugly, but one works.
Re:You need unique identifiers. (Score:3, Informative)
For the same reason the US Dept. of Commerce set up ICANN in the first place. They wanted the Internet to be a world-wide entity and decided it shouldn't be under the control of any one national government. Unfortunately, we now have an elitist corporation in charge instead of an elitist government agency, which isn't an improvement. Initially, the current board at ICANN was supposed to be a temporary board until a "popularly chosen" board could be assembled, but the "temporary" board decided that they wanted to stay and changed the rules so they became "temporary advisory board members", serving with the elected board. Then they pulled all sorts of sleazy rule changes that prevented the elected members from doing anything, and changed their "temporary" board status to "permanent". Now they've decided to get rid of the elected members altogether, because they cause too much trouble by objecting to all this crap. Sleazebags.
Re:Good Enough? (Score:3, Interesting)
I wonder how Vint Cerf reconciles this action (removing all publically elected board positions) with his stated position that ICANN has been inaccurately charged with non-transparent process, lack of oversight and irresponsibly heavy big-business bias? Is ICANN still the good guy and Karl some deluded pest? Or is the risk of all whistleblowers risk just being dismissed along with him?
Re:Good Enough? (Score:2, Informative)
Nothing. Check out OpenNIC [unrated.net], one of several alternate roots [google.com] for DNS.
Department of .COMmerce - primarying the root zone (Score:5, Insightful)
1) Protocol numbers.
2) IP addresses
3) Domain names.
1 + 2 are autonomous. If ICANN were tovanish tomorrow, nothing bad would happen; they're fine, ignore the,
3) ICANN has an exclusive contract with the DoC to edit the Internet DNS root zone. Technically, they "suggest changes" to the DoC; they cannot do anything they want.
The extent of this though, is it only affects you if you happen to use the 13 root servers operated under aegis of the DoC. Last weeks attack that knocked, what? - half of them off the air is one more reason why we as users and administrators should end out dependance on the legacy root servers.
How?
Just primary the root zone for yourself. You really want to depend of somebody else for a 100K file that if it's not there the entire known internet ceases to exist do you?
Here's the file you need:
ftp://rs.internic.net/domain/
Dat's it. The whole enchilada. That's what all the fuss is about and that is all those 13 precious servers to is serve up that file. Grab a copy yourself and use it.
These are subtle changes every day. Lithuania may get a new secondary or
If you're using windows you may already have the ability to run your own nameservers on your box. If it's not built in, go grab a copy of BIND-PE (NT) or BIND-LE (W9x). If you're using unix, just declare yourself primary for "." or secondary the root zone from your favorite root zone publisher.
Now you don't care what happens to the 13 legacy root servers. Or ICANN.
What can we do? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What can we do? (Score:2)
ICANN's job is to "measure consensus" of "the community" and implement it.
Go dig up the Marina Del Rey Real(spit)Video where they decided what the new tlds would be and you tell me if that's "measuring community consensus" or simple top down authority.
I know where the bodies are buried, but you people need to go find this out for yourselves. Hint: it's big and blue.
I'm not too worried (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I'm not too worried (Score:2)
Its not like you're going to find many webservers running multicast. On a side note, it pains me to see how multicast has been left on the side of the road to die all of these years. There are several applications today (like internet radio and rebroadcast video) that would benefit from multicast (especially the producer, who only has to send one stream out at a time instead of hundreds or thousands). It's kind of a shame that router hardware limitations basically killed it off (Ciscos have to use their dog slow CPU to multicast instead of the fast custom hardware).
Oh MBone, how we miss you so.
What to do now? (Score:5, Insightful)
perhaps in light of its tactics to silent critics whom are board of director members
by eliminating their position, perhaps the Dept of Commerce should have an inquiry
into the affairs of ICANN and its executive.
Re:What to do now? (Score:3, Funny)
I'd like to see the response of a politician asked "Do you feel that ICANN's actions are justified in eliminating Karl Auerbach's position from their board?"
Re:What to do now? (Score:2)
And by posting to this article, you cancelled your own mod point! Oh, the irony....
Unless, of course, you have more than one /. account... but that won't be fair? right? hello? right?
Uh... yeah.
No public control = No public support (Score:3, Insightful)
ICANN? What is that good for.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Now that we got the long awaited new TLDs, what are the next key thing they're waiting to screwup?
No suprise. (Score:5, Interesting)
Karl being on the board was a black eye for them as he kept trying to reform them and trying to assert the rights of the public and make them accountable. The last straw was Karl successfully suing them.
They had to get rid of Karl and in one stroke, they got rid of Karl and the public input via the other elected members.
don't rock the boat (Score:4, Insightful)
Does Congress know about this? (Score:5, Interesting)
ICANN's At Large Membership is a new way to participate in the ICANN process. The At Large Members will help select Directors to the ICANN Board. The At Large election process will give individual members of Internet communities worldwide a voice in the selection of policymakers to oversee the critical Internet resources entrusted to ICANN's technical coordination process. The selected At Large Directors will help the ICANN Board be representative of (and accountable to) the vast diversity of the worldwide Internet.
How was ICANN permitted to make this change to the charter that was granted to them by the government? It's this kind of crap that, if you raise your voice enough, can be changed by your representatives in Washington and by regulatory agencies who are open to public comment during policy making. It's also fertile ground for a lawsuit (albiet a money-losing one).
Re:Does Congress know about this? (Score:2)
Ultimately Congress or agencies directly responsible to ICANN
Congress is responsible to ICANN? Sheesh! I mean, I knew they were gettting too big for their britches, but if they really have Congress at their beck and call, they've got to go, and now!
Befuddled (Score:2, Funny)
What happened? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What happened? (Score:3, Insightful)
Part of the point of ICANN was to avoid creating a new international treaty organization. I don't know that turning this all over to ISOC or IETF was ever really an option; the issue was simply too big. ICANN needs to be reined in, certainly, but having the DNS run by a subgroup of the International Telecommunications Union or by a new treaty organization would be a nightmare.
The big win of ICANN is that power stays with relatively clueful people (Dyson, Cerf, et al.) instead of representatives of major world governments. The really big win of ICANN was that the "people of the Internet" could elect even more clueful people to oversee the self-appointed board members. With this level of oversight gone, ICANN loses a good deal of its credibility.
Anyone thought about reviving the Boston Working Group [cavebear.com], of which Karl was a prominent member?
Re:What happened? (Score:2)
to their citizens. Who are the BoD of ICANN
accountable to? Apparently the staff. Hrmph.
Re:What happened? (Score:3, Insightful)
How would that be the case?
Oh hell no (Score:2)
ICANN keep an eye on them (Score:4, Informative)
Therefore, I and many other feel that the actions of those on the executive board of ICANN must be closely monitored. Anyone and everyone who's ever signed onto AOL or Prodigy or even MSN has a stake in these events.
I've attached below a list of some sites to gleam information from about the latest happenings (and scandals) related to ICANN.
- http://www.icannwatch.org/ [icannwatch.org]
- http://www.icannwatch.com/ [icannwatch.com]
- http://www.atlargestudy.org/index.html [atlargestudy.org]
- And, for reference, http://www.domainhandbook.com/archives/comp-icann
The thing is... (Score:4, Interesting)
What bothers me most is, since it's been pretty clear all along they have no concern for integrity of the net or public good online, and they never felt the need to keep us from knowing that, what the heck is it they're getting ready to do that they don't want us o know about? Paranoid, yes, but I really don't see why they would have gone to so much trouble over this unless they have something up their sleeve.
As a farewell present... (Score:5, Funny)
Karl already has a TLD - .ewe (Score:2)
p2.cavebear.com.
ns1.vrx.net.
ns2.vrx.net.
m
Why Auerback filed the lawsuit (Score:3, Interesting)
Terrorist alert (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Terrorist alert (Score:3, Insightful)
..and that is not funny at all.
The last remnant of the Old Republic are dissolved (Score:5, Funny)
Help me, Postel-Jon Kenobi! You're our only hope! (Score:2)
Some of us were skeptical about the concept at the beginning, but the immense practicality of a common naming system compared to
discrimination? (Score:3, Funny)
Why should they care about what religion he is if he's capable of the job?
Government Oversight (Score:4, Insightful)
This needs to be stopped immidiately...
Re:Government Oversight (Score:4, Insightful)
Sure, in the US there is supposed to be a democracy... but how would you feel when the rules for acquiring a domain name suddenly raise to the comlexity of (for a random example) Copyright or Patent law? So complex that even lawyers can't agree on which end to hold.
It's impractical because of the now enormous resources required to do this, but the only solution is to return DNS to what it was meant to be in the first place: collaborating but disjoint entities serving TLD out of geographically and /administratively/ disjoint areas.
It could be done. All it would need is some guts, a handful of competent sysadmins from around the world, a few months development time and one HELL of a big pipe!
-- MG
Re:Government Oversight (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Government Oversight (Score:4, Funny)
Excuse me, were you talking about the "War on Terror" or "ICANN" ?
That sounds just like government to me.... (Score:4, Insightful)
There have been some recent proposals saying that the ITU should be in charge - as somebody who's been in the telecom business for 25 years, I view them as better than ICANN, because some of them are engineers and because they're a slow bureaucratic multilateral committee rather than a cabal, but they're still the kind o f bureaucratic telecom who brought you E.164 names, X.25 as their best example of data networking, and OSI protocols and high European telecom settlement costs, and the best thing about them has been that you could usually ignore them and use whatever interesting tools came out of the vendor and developer community...
It already has "Government Oversight" (Score:2)
They're utterly the wrong people to be doing this. Unless you count being inept and corrupt as attributes you want to have for an organization that oversees the Internet DNS.
IBM alone spends $30M a year lobbying for no new tlds. Guess where that goes.
Follow the money.
Auerbach's desk (Score:2)
What's wrong with that -- isn't that how most of us have things set up?
Workstation: Desk or Computer? (Score:2, Funny)
On the other hand, I mostly stopped bitching about bureaucrats using this terminology when I built a lab a couple of years ago - we had $900 desks, with $400 PCs on them, so if the Furniture Mafia are getting more of the money, they can decide which stuff gets the title. (Of course, the reason we had $900 desks and $1500 racks that arrived six months and eight procurement review meetings after we started the project instead of $100 desks and $200 Metro shelves that the furniture store on the next block said they could deliver on Tuesday was because the Building Furniture Mafia told us that furniture procurement was An Offer We Couldn't Refuse, and that we would only be allowed to install racks that were Officially Earthquake-Bolted to the floor, and the only way to get Official Earthquake-Bolting was to order furniture from people the Building Furniture Mafia had deals with...)
Attempt to marginalize Auerbach (Score:5, Insightful)
The fact is that the ICANN board tried to restrict information that ought to be available to the public let alone an elected board member, the courts found that this was wrong and then the buggers decide to kick him off the board.
Let's get these people under control. It's our friggin internet subsidized with our taxes, populated with our webpages.
Re: (Score:2)
ICANN is like Section 1 (Score:3, Insightful)
These guys are all fucking crooks. Owned by corporate interests. They've shut out the public from participating in electing the board members -- ALL MEMBERS SHOULD BE ELECTED. If businesses want to have their interests represented, their executives can vote. These crooks have taken all accountability to the public out of the equation. Its no different than taxation without representation.
Grass Roots Movement (Score:5, Informative)
I joined and set up my primary NS to resolve their domains for me, as well as the normal ones. Took about 15 minutes to get working (forgot the forwarders, so it took 10 minutes longer than expected
Yeah, I know; I have heard it all before. "But nobody else uses it, so it's worthless!". Not. Everything, and I mean EVERY DAMN THING starts out SMALL. That's not a reason to ignore it or otherwise dismiss it out-of-hand. It's even democratic right out of the box, so it is exactly what *we* want it to be.
Join it now. If you are an ISP, set it up for your customers. Help out. Set it up for your friends and family members. Make it a REAL alternative to the monopolized mess that the US Gov't has made of the current DNS system.
Don't argue. Just do it. It CANNOT HURT!
Re:Grass Roots Movement (Score:2)
Re:Grass Roots Movement (Score:2)
If I could do :-) Are there any Debian hackers here who know if that approach would even be viable?
apt-get install opennic
and that's it, then I would do it, definately.
What about those records? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What about those records? (Score:3, Interesting)
Nothing New Here (Score:5, Informative)
If you take a look at ICANN's homepage [icann.org] you will see a number of references to new and proposed bylaws for the organization. The first proposal looks to have surfaced on Oct 2 of this year. I'm guessing what's happened recently is that ICANN voted to adopt the proposals and that's why Allerbach and the rest of the 'At Large' directors are out of a job. It's a guess, but it fits the available facts. But this certainly isn't really new information, not unless you count proposals posted over three weeks ago as new. Allerbach likely knew this was coming, it wasn't just some 'out of the blue' move from ICANN.
Reading through the proposals I note that they suggest eliminating a number of directorships, not just the At Large directors. The proposals call for shifting the functions of the At Large directors to an At Large advisory committee and a Manager of Public Participation. There are a bunch of other suggestions on reform, et. al. in the documents, feel free to have a look [icann.org] on your own if you're interested in the nuts and bolts of the ICANN organizational process.
Finally, I don't personally know Allerbach and I can't say one way or the other if his departure from the ICANN Board of Directors is appropriate or not. He may be a stark raving nutcase for all I know, or he may be the last voice of reason and integrity in the organization, who knows? Not me. I can however guarantee that suing the organization, regardless of the reasons he did so, was unlikely to win him any friends on the board. After that, it shouldn't come as much of a surprise to anyone that ICANN wants to close-up the ranks of their Board of Directors and avoid this type of public embarrassment in the future. But I think it's inaccurate to claim that ICANN forced him out, there's nothing to substantiate that.
Whatever the reasons, I wish him luck in the future and hope that he will continue his efforts to keep ICANN accountable for their policies and actions and keep the process open to public comment and criticism. God knows they need someone to hold them accountable.
Re:Nothing New Here (Score:2, Informative)
Section 1. GENERAL
The Board may create one or more Advisory Committees in addition to those set forth in this Article. Advisory Committee membership may consist of Directors only, Directors and non-directors, or non-directors only, and may also include non-voting or alternate members. <b>Advisory Committees shall have no legal authority to act for ICANN, but shall report their findings and recommendations to the Board.</b>
<p>I guess that means they are still willing to hold court, but not have us in the corporoyalty.
<p>
-Ke
So why not try this: (Score:4, Interesting)
For one, universities are all connected to a huge backbone and the technical knowhow is there too. The money coming in from domain/ip registration would come in handy to the universities, too. Hell, even if they where to make a profit, I wouldn't care that much, as long as it gets pumped back into education.
But just as important is that universities want and need a free flow of information. Transparancy is what they're about, if only because of the historical precedents of scientific research.
Sure, this would be a huge undertaking to set up, but there are even more benefits here: the fact that more dns servers are around mean the internet will be what it has always meant to be. Decentralised in a big way, and if a top uni comes up, hell, put it in the loop. The pieces of pie get thinner, but that's the whole point: this pie is not for consumption.
Or am I missing something here?
Just checkin' in from Shanghai (Score:5, Interesting)
The elimination of my board seat is not new news - ICANN repudated the concept that the right to govern derives from the consent of the governed several months ago in the meeting in Accra, Ghana.
ICANN's so-called "reform" plan essentially estalblishes an oligarchy in which a small group gets to say what is best for you and me without letting us cast votes to indicate whether we agree with those decisions.
ICANN is also retrenching its committment to a board-of-directors that evades its duty to oversee the behaviour and actions of the corporation's management. (For example, one of the things that was uncovered in the course of my lawsuit was that ICANN's Audit committee never bothered to look at ICANN's records but simply accepted whatever the corporation management chose to show it. Sounds like Enron and Arthur Andersen doesn't it?)
Anyway, the end of my term is somewhat uncertain - the annual meeting - being held Dec 14 and 15 in Amsterdam, is the formal end of my term. However, there are noises in ICANN about extending terms. That has me bothered as I do not feel comfortable with this.
Regards from Shanghai,
--karl--
hey karl... (Score:2)
Keep kicking butt up there at ICANN.
What we want to know is, (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What we want to know is, (Score:5, Informative)
There are parts of this report that I will probably not post publicly - for instance there are some matters that legititimately are such that I do want to preserve attorney-client privilege.
But the bottom line is pretty simple - I have not seen any smoking guns, but I have seen a signifcant lack of attention to the basics of running what amounts to a small business, a failure of the board to properly oversee the activities of management/staff, a mission that is expanding its scope faster than a star going nova, and an institutional hubris that causes it to reject anything that it does not want to hear.
Sorry for being somewhat incoherent - but I'm very jet lagged and my neuron activity is being fueled mainly by sugar and caffine.
I'll have more later.
--karl--
Re:What we want to know is, (Score:2)
We have to respect that. And I believe your attitude of respect to privilege here shows that ICANN management's restrictions on your rights as a director were merely stalling tactics until they could get you out. They had no need to fear you would publicize all sorts of confidential documents; they just didn't want any type of investigation.
I can't wait to see the report before it gets buried at the bottom of the circular bin at ICANN.
Never saw THAT coming... (Score:3, Insightful)
Nothing like a good, old-fashioned, high-tech star chamber!
Ya, they need to be totally dissolved, and a new body put in place with rules strictly defined BEFORE any members are put in place, with some basic charter principles that can't be changed.
ICANN dangersigns! (Score:2)
1. Denying and obstructing peoples access to financial records. What makes this even more extreme is that ICANN tried to deny and obstruct a _board member/director_ to this information. Clearly illegal.
2. The elimination of all internal opposition. "Opposition" meaning people who tries to do their job according to the law.
3. Usually when you have the above danger signal, you will also find, that those "third parties" that oversees the financial records
Seen from the outside, it looks like that ICANN is spinning out of control, and that no-one is trying to stop the mess.
A financial "crash" and a scandal would not be an unlikely outcome.
Re:Death to ICANN (Score:2)
Re:Death to ICANN (Score:2, Insightful)
The internet was nearly brought to it's knees.. except basically nobody noticed. It was a massive attack and it had little overall effect.
The internet routes around problems. If icann goes too far, the world will find a way to ignore them.
that is, unless major isp's start doing transparent proxying on dns
Re:Death to ICANN (Score:4, Insightful)
No, Al-Qaeda would be to blame. ICANN would be guilty of negligence but not responsible for the activity.
You might as well say that whateverthehell airline it is whose plane was crashed into the WTC is wholly responsible for the attack, but they're not the ones who seized the planes and crashed them into the buildings.
Inaccurate characterization of ICANN. (Score:5, Interesting)
As far as the DNS DDOS attack goes, the relationship between ICANN and the root servers is pretty fluid - it doesn't own or control them, though the Feds fund some of them, and it's more concerned with the master databases of who owns what names than the implementation issues of what IP address currently is attached to the names. Remember, ICANN are not engineers - they're intellectual property policy wonks. ICANN does encourage the root servers and the registries and registrars to follow security / reliability standards, and the recent DDOS attack means that there'll be some changes in the way things are run. There's an RFC 2870 on Root Name Server Operational Requirements [rfc-editor.org], so if you've got opinions on how they can do a better job, go Comment.
ICANN's work on the top-level domains deserves mixed reviews. Moving slowly is usually ok; the big reasons for expanding the space are "because it gives us more cool names to sell", and one of the big reasons for going slowly is that you can only sell each TLD once, so you'd better get it right. Unfortunately, their definitions of getting it right strongly involve letting them stay in control, and are biased against any experimentation except along very narrow lines that they can stay in control of. But the IETF Ad-Hoc committee couldn't crack the political layer either. One thing both groups did right is pick a bunch of boring TLD names for the first batch, because they're going to make mistakes and discover unexpected problems in the first batch or two, and it's much better to mess up the market for .MUSEUM or .FIRM which nobody cares too much about than to mess up commercially valuable names like .INC or .LTD or .SEX or anything that overlaps with the voice telephone business.
IPv6 is Not ICANN's Job. It's the industry's, and the carriers', and Cisco's. ICANN does have the responsibility for coordinating the root servers' transition to support for IPv6 name lookups, and for making sure the Reverse DNS Lookup space (today's 1.0.0.127.in-addr.arpa PTR queries) gets managed correctly, though the standards work is probably the IETF's job, or maybe ISOC's. The one thing they've done in the IPv6 space that was Blatantly Evil (but probably reversable) was to claim that all your address bits are belong to them and set an unacceptably high price for the smallest routable address block. This not only delays widespread implementation until a major carrier either decides to pay them or ignore them, it nails down some assumptions about the shape of the hierarchy and organizational relationships that may be hard to repair, and increases the brittleness of the net without obviously benefitting the routing table situation (which is probably a more important IPv6 issue than the supply of address bits.) This delay gives them more time to try to finish grabbing power before IPv6's virtually-unlimited address space escapes from their ability to steal it from the world and sell it, but it also gives the industry more time to figure out what we're going to do with IPv6 and how to manage it, which is not a Bad Thing - there's a lot we really need to learn about how to use it before it's ready to replace IPv4.
Re:Death to ICANN (Score:2)
*blink*
A corporation is accountable to no one but its
shareholders -- and the accountants have helped
the executives make a mockery of even that
constraint. But even in theory, a corporation is
never accountable to the public, which is what
the organization that manages namespaces must be.
Nope (Score:2)
They're supposed to be open!