July 27, 2006

Experts weigh giving ICANN full control of DNS

Some say having the U.S. involved in DNS management holds back development of the Internet

Internet governance experts argued on Wednesday for and against having the U.S. government hand over completely the technical coordination and management of the Internet's domain name system (DNS) to the private, non-profit ICANN this year.

Those in favor of completing this transition, which began in 1998, said the political price of having the U.S. involved in DNS management has become too high and holds back the international development of the Internet.

Meanwhile, others warned that ICANN (the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers) isn't yet ready to take on this task alone and that a premature withdrawal by the U.S. government could compromise the Internet's security and stability.

The U.S. Department of Commerce called Wednesday's public meeting as part of its consultation process on the upcoming expiration of its agreement with ICANN to co-manage the DNS. That deal ends in September. In the weeks preceding the meeting, which was Webcast, about 700 written comments were sent to the Commerce Department.

At issue is whether the 1998 agreement should be extended to keep the joint management in place or whether it's time for the Commerce Department to bow out.

John Kneuer, acting administrator of the Commerce Department's National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), said the U.S. government remains committed to the transition, but not at any price.

"We have an incentive and a long-standing policy to complete this transition," he said. "But we will take no actions that will [compromise] the stability and security of the Internet."

Internet Society President and Chief Executive Officer Lynn St. Amour argued on behalf of handing over the DNS reins to ICANN sooner rather than later, saying that ICANN is ready and it's time to quiet the political static caused by the U.S. government's participation.

"We continue to be concerned about attempts to politicize the Internet and its management," said St. Amour, whose non-profit organization is involved in Internet-related standards, education and policy. "As long as the U.S. government has a role in ICANN’s governance and management, organizations and other governments have an incentive to try to leverage political channels to their favor."

Others, like Tim Ruiz, vice president of corporate development and policy of registrar GoDaddy.com, said that the U.S. needs to remain involved and the agreement extended. "It's premature to consider ending the [agreement] so we're requesting some extension be made," he said, citing concerns about accountability mechanisms and governance issues.

Independent of what happens, there are two main challenges that need to be addressed, said Marcus Sachs, from independent non-profit research organization SRI International.

One is the security of the DNS, he said. "A lot of the problems we have today are largely based on the fact that the DNS itself, mechanically, doesn't have built-in security," he said. Solving this is critical for increasing consumer confidence and the level of e-commerce activity, he said. The other problem is ensuring the DNS can scale up as the Internet grows in decades to come, Sachs said.

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