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Published byNaomi Sibyl Johnston Modified over 9 years ago
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ICANN, Internet and the future Philip Sheppard, AIM - European Brands Association Names Council ICANN
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ICANN - Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers Numbers - interest to technocrats Names - of interest to Intellectual Property (IP)
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Self-regulation - the players Pipes and wires of the Internet global registries, country registries, registrars, Internet Service Providers Net users business, non-commercial, intellectual property
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Key IP issues Domain names and the potential for cybersquatting So, need for accurate information (WHOIS) So, need for dispute resolution (UDRP) So, need for care in new domain names
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ICANN reform After four years, time to review the structures and process Agreed in Shanghai, November 2002 new by-laws slimmer Board, some chosen by a nominating committee new policy process separation of generics and country-names
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New policy issues Transfers and deletes of domain names- restrictive practices Improving WHOIS data Improving the UDRP Internationalised domain names New top-level domain names (gTLDs)
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New names - polarised debate IP advocates shocked from.com cybersquating Non-comms (freedom to name advocates) shocked from losing domains
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Common ground IP objective =consumer confidence IP strategy = IPR priority Non-comm objective = fair use Non-comms strategy = limit IPR priority Same objective from perspective of net user Findability
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Proposal for differentiated names .com,.info are unrestricted, unsponsored .museum,.aero are restricted/sponsored restricted to a set of users sponsored by an enforcement body Business wants all new names to be: restricted/sponsored subject to six principles
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Creating clarity - principles 1.Differentiation – a gTLD must be clearly differentiated from all other gTLDs. 2.Certainty – a gTLD must give the user confidence that it stands for what it purports to stand for. 3.Honesty – a gTLD must avoid increasing opportunities for bad faith entities who wish to defraud users.
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Domain name principles 4. Competition – a gTLD must create value- added competition. 5. Diversity – a gTLD must serve commercial or non-commercial users. 6. Meaning – a gTLD must have meaning to its relevant population of users.
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A directory of names Restricted / sponsored and these six principles creates a taxonomy or directory for the domain name system. Solves 3 IP issues: No possibility to cyber squat No need/ability to defensively register Accurate WHOIS
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Business needs YOU! Business Constituency of DNSO 40 members, but 40,000 outreach Join now Look at www.bizconst.org
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