The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN /ˈaɪkæn/ EYE-kan) is a global multistakeholder group and nonprofit organization headquartered in the United States responsible for coordinating the maintenance and procedures of several databases related to the namespaces and numerical spaces of the Internet, ensuring the Internet's stable and secure operation. ICANN performs the actual technical maintenance work of the Central Internet Address pools and DNS root zone registries pursuant to the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) function contract. The contract regarding the IANA stewardship functions between ICANN and the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) of the United States Department of Commerce ended on October 1, 2016, formally transitioning the functions to the global multistakeholder community.
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Abbreviation | ICANN |
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Founded | September 30, 1998 |
Type | 501(c)3 organization |
Tax ID no. | 95-4712218 |
Focus | Manage Internet Protocol numbers and Domain Name System root |
Headquarters | Los Angeles, California, United States |
Key people |
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Employees | 428 |
Website | icann |
Internet history timeline |
Early research and development:
Merging the networks and creating the Internet:
Commercialization, privatization, broader access leads to the modern Internet:
Examples of Internet services:
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Much of its work has concerned the Internet's global Domain Name System (DNS), including policy development for internationalization of the DNS, introduction of new generic top-level domains (TLDs), and the operation of root name servers. The numbering facilities ICANN manages include the Internet Protocol address spaces for IPv4 and IPv6, and the assignment of address blocks to regional Internet registries. ICANN also maintains registries of Internet Protocol identifiers.
ICANN's primary principles of operation have been described as helping preserve the operational stability of the Internet; promoting competition; achieving broad representation of the global Internet community; and developing policies appropriate to its mission through bottom-up, consensus-based processes. The organization has often included a motto of "One World. One Internet." on annual reports beginning in 2010, on less formal publications, as well as their official website.
ICANN was officially incorporated in the state of California on September 30, 1998. Originally headquartered in Marina del Rey in the same building as the University of Southern California's Information Sciences Institute (ISI), its offices are now in the Playa Vista neighborhood of Los Angeles.
History
Before the establishment of ICANN, the IANA function of administering registries of Internet protocol identifiers (including the distributing top-level domains and IP addresses) was performed by Jon Postel, a computer science researcher who had been involved in the creation of ARPANET, first at UCLA and then at USC-ISI. In 1997 Postel testified before Congress that this had come about as a "side task" to this research work. The Information Sciences Institute was funded by the U.S. Department of Defense, as was SRI International's Network Information Center, which also performed some assigned name functions.
As the Internet grew and expanded globally, the U.S. Department of Commerce initiated a process to establish a new organization to perform the IANA functions. On January 30, 1998, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA), an agency of the U.S. Department of Commerce, issued for comment, "A Proposal to Improve the Technical Management of Internet Names and Addresses." The proposed rule making, or "Green Paper", was published in the Federal Register on February 20, 1998, providing opportunity for public comment. NTIA received more than 650 comments as of March 23, 1998, when the comment period closed.
The Green Paper proposed certain actions designed to privatize the management of Internet names and addresses in a manner that allows for the development of competition and facilitates global participation in Internet management. The Green Paper proposed for discussion a variety of issues relating to DNS management including private sector creation of a new not-for-profit corporation (the "new corporation") managed by a globally and functionally representative board of directors. ICANN was formed in response to this policy. ICANN managed the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) under contract to the United States Department of Commerce (DOC) and pursuant to an agreement with the IETF.
ICANN was incorporated in California on September 30, 1998, with entrepreneur and philanthropist Esther Dyson as founding chairwoman. It is a public-benefit nonprofit corporation "organized under the California Nonprofit Public Benefit Corporation Law for charitable and public purposes." ICANN was established in California due to the presence of Postel, who was a founder of ICANN and was set to be its first Chief Technology Officer prior to his unexpected death. ICANN formerly operated from the same Marina del Rey building where Postel formerly worked, which is home to an office of the Information Sciences Institute at the University of Southern California. However, ICANN's headquarters is now located in the nearby Playa Vista neighborhood of Los Angeles.
Per its original by-laws, primary responsibility for policy formation in ICANN was to be delegated to three supporting organizations (Address Supporting Organization, Domain Name Supporting Organization, and Protocol Supporting Organization), each of which was to develop and recommend substantive policies and procedures for the management of the identifiers within their respective scope. They were also required to be financially independent from ICANN. As expected, the regional Internet registries and the IETF agreed to serve as the Address Supporting Organization and Protocol Supporting Organization respectively, and ICANN issued a call for interested parties to propose the structure and composition of the Domain Name Supporting Organization. In March 1999, the ICANN Board, based in part on the DNSO proposals received, decided instead on an alternate construction for the DNSO which delineated specific constituencies bodies within ICANN itself, thus adding primary responsibility for DNS policy development to ICANN's existing duties of oversight and coordination.
On July 26, 2006, the United States government renewed the contract with ICANN for performance of the IANA function for an additional one to five years. The context of ICANN's relationship with the U.S. government was clarified on September 29, 2006, when ICANN signed a new memorandum of understanding with the United States Department of Commerce (DOC). This document gave the DOC oversight over some of the ICANN operations.
In July 2008, the DOC reiterated an earlier statement that it has "no plans to transition management of the authoritative root zone file to ICANN". The letter also stresses the separate roles of the IANA and VeriSign.
On September 30, 2009, ICANN signed an agreement with the DOC (known as the "Affirmation of Commitments") that confirmed ICANN's commitment to a multistakeholder governance model, but did not remove it from DOC oversight and control. The Affirmation of Commitments, which aimed to create international oversight, ran into criticism.
On March 10, 2016, ICANN and the DOC signed a historic, culminating agreement to finally remove ICANN and IANA from the control and oversight of the DOC. On October 1, 2016, ICANN was freed from U.S. government oversight.
Since its creation, ICANN has been the subject of criticism and controversy. In 2000, professor Michael Froomkin of the University of Miami School of Law argued that ICANN's relationship with the U.S. Department of Commerce is illegal, in violation of either the Constitution or federal statutes. On June 10, 2024, it was announced that Kurt Erik Lindqvist, who has been CEO of the London Internet Exchange since 2019, was to become the new president and CEO of ICANN on December 5, 2024.
Notable events
On March 18, 2002, publicly elected At-Large Representative for North America board member Karl Auerbach sued ICANN in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, California, to gain access to ICANN's accounting records without restriction. Judge Dzintra Janavs ruled in Auerbach's favor on July 29, 2002.
During September and October 2003, ICANN played a crucial role in the conflict over VeriSign's "wild card" DNS service Site Finder. After an open letter from ICANN issuing an ultimatum to VeriSign, later endorsed by the Internet Architecture Board, the company voluntarily ended the service on October 4, 2003. After this action, VeriSign filed a lawsuit against ICANN on February 27, 2004, claiming that ICANN had exceeded its authority. By this lawsuit, VeriSign sought to reduce ambiguity about ICANN's authority. The antitrust component of VeriSign's claim was dismissed during August 2004. VeriSign's challenge that ICANN overstepped its contractual rights is currently outstanding. A proposed settlement already approved by ICANN's board would resolve VeriSign's challenge to ICANN in exchange for the right to increase pricing on .com domains. At the meeting of ICANN in Rome, which took place from March 2 to 6, 2004, ICANN agreed to ask approval of the U.S. Department of Commerce for the Waiting List Service of VeriSign.[citation needed]
On May 17, 2004, ICANN published a proposed budget for the year 2004–05. It included proposals to increase the openness and professionalism of its operations, and increased its proposed spending from US$8.27 million to $15.83 million. The increase was to be funded by the introduction of new top-level domains, charges to domain registries, and a fee for some domain name registrations, renewals and transfers (initially US$0.20 for all domains within a country-code top-level domain, and US$0.25 for all others).[citation needed] The Council of European National Top Level Domain Registries (CENTR), which represents the Internet registries of 39 countries, rejected the increase, accusing ICANN of a lack of financial prudence and criticizing what it describes as ICANN's "unrealistic political and operational targets". Despite the criticism, the registry agreement for the top-level domains jobs and travel includes a US$2 fee on every domain the licensed companies sell or renew.
After a second round of negotiations during 2004, the TLDs eu, asia, travel, jobs, mobi, and cat were introduced during 2005.

On February 28, 2006, ICANN's board approved a settlement with VeriSign in the lawsuit resulting from SiteFinder that involved allowing VeriSign (the registry) to raise its registration fees by up to 7% a year. This was criticised by a few members of the U.S. House of Representatives' Small Business Committee.
During February 2007, ICANN began procedures to end accreditation of one of their registrars, RegisterFly amid charges and lawsuits involving fraud, and criticism of ICANN's management of the situation. ICANN has been the subject of criticism as a result of its handling of RegisterFly, and the harm caused to thousands of clients as a result of what has been termed ICANN's "laissez faire attitude toward customer allegations of fraud".
On May 23, 2008, ICANN issued enforcement notices against ten accredited registrars and announced this through a press release entitled "'Worst Spam Offenders' Notified by ICANN, Compliance system working to correct Whois and other issues." This was largely in response to a report issued by KnujOn, called "The 10 Worst Registrars" in terms of spam advertised junk product sites and compliance failure. The mention of the word "spam" in the title of the ICANN memo is somewhat misleading since ICANN does not address issues of spam or email abuse. Website content and usage are not within ICANN's mandate. However, the KnujOn report details how various registrars have not complied with their contractual obligations under the Registrar Accreditation Agreement (RAA). The main point of the KnujOn research was to demonstrate the relationships between compliance failure, illicit product traffic, and spam. The report demonstrated that out of 900 ICANN accredited registrars, fewer than 20 held 90% of the web domains advertised in spam. These same registrars were also most frequently cited by KnujOn as failing to resolve complaints made through the Whois Data Problem Reporting System (WDPRS).
On June 26, 2008, the ICANN Board started a new process of TLD naming policy to take a "significant step forward on the introduction of new generic top-level domains." This program envisioned the availability of many new or already proposed domains, as well a new application and implementation process.
On October 1, 2008, ICANN issued breach notices against Joker and Beijing Innovative Linkage Technology Ltd. after further researching reports and complaints issued by KnujOn. These notices gave the registrars 15 days to fix their Whois investigation efforts.
In 2010, ICANN approved a major review of its policies with respect to accountability, transparency, and public participation by the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University. This external review was an assistance of the work of ICANN's Accountability and Transparency Review team.
On February 3, 2011, ICANN announced that it had distributed the last batch of its remaining IPv4 addresses to the world's five regional Internet registries, the organizations that manage IP addresses in different regions. These registries began assigning the final IPv4 addresses within their regions until they ran out completely.
On June 20, 2011, the ICANN board voted to end most restrictions on the names of generic top-level domains (gTLD). Companies and organizations became able to choose essentially arbitrary top-level Internet domain names. The use of non-Latin characters (such as Cyrillic, Arabic, Chinese, etc.) is also allowed in gTLDs. ICANN began accepting applications for new gTLDS on January 12, 2012. The initial price to apply for a new gTLD was set at $185,000 and the annual renewal fee is $25,000.
During December 2011, the Federal Trade Commission stated ICANN had long failed to provide safeguards that protect consumers from online swindlers.
Following the 2013 NSA spying scandal, ICANN endorsed the Montevideo Statement, although no direct connection between these could be proven.
On October 1, 2016, ICANN ended its contract with the United States Department of Commerce National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) and entered the private sector.
The European Union's General Data Protection Regulation (active since May 25, 2018) has had an impact on ICANN's operations, which had to be fixed via some last minute changes.[clarification needed]
Structure
From its founding to the present, ICANN has been formally organized as a nonprofit corporation "for charitable and public purposes" under the California Nonprofit Public Benefit Corporation Law. It is managed by a 16-member board of directors composed of eight members selected by a nominating committee on which all the constituencies of ICANN are represented; six representatives of its Supporting Organizations, sub-groups that deal with specific sections of the policies under ICANN's purview; an at-large seat filled by an at-large organization; and the president / CEO, appointed by the board.
There are currently three supporting organizations: the Generic Names Supporting Organization (GNSO) deals with policy making on generic top-level domains (gTLDs); the Country Code Names Supporting Organization (ccNSO) deals with policy making on country-code top-level domains (ccTLDs); the Address Supporting Organization (ASO) deals with policy making on IP addresses.
ICANN also relies on some advisory committees and other advisory mechanisms to receive advice on the interests and needs of stakeholders that do not directly participate in the Supporting Organizations. These include the Governmental Advisory Committee (GAC), which is composed of representatives of a large number of national governments from all over the world; the At-Large Advisory Committee (ALAC), which is composed of individual Internet users from around the world selected by each of the Regional At-Large Organizations (RALO) and Nominating Committee; the Root Server System Advisory Committee, which provides advice on the operation of the DNS root server system; the Security and Stability Advisory Committee (SSAC), which is composed of Internet experts who study security issues pertaining to ICANN's mandate; and the Technical Liaison Group (TLG), which is composed of representatives of other international technical organizations that focus, at least in part, on the Internet.
Governmental Advisory Committee

Representatives
The Governmental Advisory Committee has representatives from 179 states and 38 Observer organizations, including the Holy See, Cook Islands, Niue, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Bermuda, Montserrat, the European Commission and the African Union Commission.
Observers
In addition the following organizations are GAC Observers:
- African Telecommunications Union
- Asia-Pacific Telecommunity
- Caribbean Telecommunications Union (CTU)
- Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation (CTO)
- Council of Europe
- Economic Commission for Africa (ECA)
- European Broadcasting Union
- European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN)
- European Space Agency
- International Labour Office
- International Telecommunication Union (ITU)
- International Criminal Police Organization (INTERPOL)
- International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement
- Latin American Association of Telecom Regulatory Agencies (REGULATEL)
- League of Arab States
- New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD)
- Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
- The Organization for Islamic Cooperation
- Organization of American States
- Organisation internationale de la Francophonie (OIF)
- Pacific Islands Forum
- Secretariat of the Pacific Community (SPC)
- Inter-American Telecommunication Commission (CITEL)
- International Criminal Court
- United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO)
- Universal Postal Union
- World Bank
- World Health Organization (WHO)
- World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)
- World Meteorological Organization
- World Trade Organization
Trusted Community Representatives
As the operator of the IANA domain name functions, ICANN is responsible for the DNSSEC management of the root zone. While day-to-day operations are managed by ICANN and Verisign, the trust is rooted in a group of Trusted Community Representatives. The members of this group must not be affiliated with ICANN, but are instead members of the broader DNS community, volunteering to become a Trusted Community Representative. The role of the representatives are primarily to take part in regular key ceremonies at a physical location, organized by ICANN, and to safeguard the key materials in between.
Democratic input
In the Memorandum of understanding that set up the relationship between ICANN and the U.S. government, ICANN was given a mandate requiring that it operate "in a bottom-up, consensus-driven, democratic manner." However, the attempts that ICANN has made to establish an organizational structure that would allow wide input from the global Internet community did not produce results amenable to the current Board. As a result, the At-Large constituency and direct election of board members by the global Internet community were soon abandoned.
ICANN holds periodic public meetings rotated between continents for the purpose of encouraging global participation in its processes. Resolutions of the ICANN Board, preliminary reports, and minutes of the meetings are published on the ICANN website, sometimes in real-time. However, there are criticisms from ICANN constituencies including the Noncommercial Users Constituency (NCUC) and the At-Large Advisory Committee (ALAC) that there is not enough public disclosure and that too many discussions and decisions take place out of sight of the public.
During the early 2000s, there had been speculation that the United Nations might assume control of ICANN, followed by a negative reaction from the U.S. government and worries about a division of the Internet. At UN's World Summit on the Information Society in Tunisia in November 2005, the world's governments agreed not to get involved in the day-to-day and technical operations of ICANN. However they also agreed to establish an international Internet Governance Forum, with a consultative role on the future governance of the Internet. ICANN's Government Advisory Committee is currently established to provide advice to ICANN regarding public policy issues and has participation by many of the world's governments.
Some have attempted to argue that ICANN was never given the authority to decide policy, e.g., choose new TLDs or exclude other interested parties who refuse to pay ICANN's US$185,000 fee but was to be a technical caretaker. Critics[who?] suggest that ICANN should not be allowed to impose business rules on market participants and that all TLDs should be added on a first-come, first-served basis and the market should be the arbiter of who succeeds and who does not.
Activities
Uniform Domain-Name Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP)
One task that ICANN was asked to do was to address the issue of domain name ownership resolution for generic top-level domains (gTLDs). ICANN's attempt at such a policy was drafted in close cooperation with the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), and the result has now become known as the Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP). This policy essentially attempts to provide a mechanism for rapid, cheap and reasonable resolution of domain name conflicts, avoiding the traditional court system for disputes by allowing cases to be brought to one of a set of bodies that arbitrate domain name disputes. According to ICANN policy, domain registrants must agree to be bound by the UDRP—they cannot get a domain name without agreeing to this.
Examination of the UDRP decision patterns has caused some to conclude that compulsory domain name arbitration is less likely to give a fair hearing to domain name owners asserting defenses under the First Amendment and other laws, compared to the federal courts of appeal in particular.
Proposed elimination of public DNS whois
In 2013, the initial report of ICANN's Expert Working Group has recommended that the present form of Whois, a utility that allows anyone to know who has registered a domain name on the Internet, should be "abandoned". It recommends it be replaced with a system that keeps most registration information secret (or "gated") from most Internet users, and only discloses information for "permissible purposes". ICANN's list of permissible purposes includes domain name research, domain name sale and purchase, regulatory enforcement, personal data protection, legal actions, and abuse mitigation. Whois has been a key tool of investigative journalists interested in determining who was disseminating information on the Internet. The use of whois by journalists is not included in the list of permissible purposes in the initial report.
Proposals for reform
Proposals have been made to internationalize ICANN's monitoring responsibilities (currently the responsibility of the US), to transform it into an international organization (under international law), and to "establish an intergovernmental mechanism enabling governments, on an equal footing, to carry out their role and responsibilities in international public policy issues pertaining to the Internet".[citation needed]
IBSA proposal (2011)
One controversial proposal, resulting from a September 2011 summit between India, Brazil, and South Africa (IBSA), would seek to move Internet governance into a "UN Committee on Internet-Related Policy" (UN-CIRP). The action was a reaction to a perception that the principles of the 2005 Tunis Agenda for the Information Society have not been met. The statement proposed the creation of a new political organization operating as a component of the United Nations to provide policy recommendations for the consideration of technical organizations such as ICANN and international bodies such as the ITU. Subsequent to public criticisms, the Indian government backed away from the proposal.
Montevideo Statement on the Future of Internet Cooperation (2013)
On October 7, 2013, the Montevideo Statement on the Future of Internet Cooperation was released by the managers of a number of organizations involved in coordinating the Internet's global technical infrastructure, loosely known as the "I*" (or "I-star") group. Among other things, the statement "expressed strong concern over the undermining of the trust and confidence of Internet users globally due to recent revelations of pervasive monitoring and surveillance" and "called for accelerating the globalization of ICANN and IANA functions, towards an environment in which all stakeholders, including all governments, participate on an equal footing". This desire to reduce United States association with the internet is considered a reaction to the ongoing NSA surveillance scandal. The statement was signed by the managers of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), the Internet Engineering Task Force, the Internet Architecture Board, the World Wide Web Consortium, the Internet Society, and the five regional Internet address registries (African Network Information Center, American Registry for Internet Numbers, Asia-Pacific Network Information Centre, Latin America and Caribbean Internet Addresses Registry, and Réseaux IP Européens Network Coordination Centre).
Global Multistakeholder Meeting on the Future of Internet Governance (2013)
During October 2013, Fadi Chehadé, former president and CEO of ICANN, met with Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff in Brasilia. Upon Chehadé's invitation, the two announced that Brazil would host an international summit on Internet governance during April 2014. The announcement came after the 2013 disclosures of mass surveillance by the U.S. government, and Rousseff's speech at the opening session of the 2013 United Nations General Assembly, where she strongly criticized the American surveillance program as a "breach of international law". The "Global Multistakeholder Meeting on the Future of Internet Governance (NET mundial)" will include representatives of government, industry, civil society, and academia.[citation needed] At the IGF VIII meeting in Bali in October 2013 a commenter noted that Brazil intends the meeting to be a "summit" in the sense that it will be high level with decision-making authority. The organizers of the "NET mundial" meeting have decided that an online forum called "/1net", set up by the I* group, will be a major conduit of non-governmental input into the three committees preparing for the meeting in April.
The Obama administration that had joined critics of ICANN during 2011 announced in March 2014 that they intended to transition away from oversight of the IANA functions contract. The current contract that the United States Department of Commerce has with ICANN expired in 2015, in its place the NTIA will transition oversight of the IANA functions to the 'global multistakeholder community'.
NetMundial Initiative (2014)
The NetMundial Initiative is a plan for international governance of the Internet that was first proposed at the Global Multistakeholder Meeting on the Future of Internet Governance (GMMFIG) conference (April 23–24, 2014) and later developed into the NetMundial Initiative by ICANN CEO Fadi Chehadé along with representatives of the World Economic Forum (WEF) and the Brazilian Internet Steering Committee (Comitê Gestor da Internet no Brasil), commonly referred to as "CGI.br".
The meeting produced a nonbinding statement in favor of consensus-based decision-making. It represented a compromise and did not harshly condemn mass surveillance or support net neutrality, despite initial endorsement for that from Brazil. The final resolution says ICANN should be controlled internationally by September 2015. A minority of governments, including Russia, China, Iran and India, were unhappy with the final resolution and wanted multilateral management for the Internet (such as a UN-based model), rather than broader multistakeholder management.
A month later, the Panel on Global Internet Cooperation and Governance Mechanisms (convened by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) and the World Economic Forum (WEF) with assistance from The Annenberg Foundation), endorsed and included the NetMundial statement in its own report.
During June 2014, France strongly attacked ICANN, saying ICANN is not a fit venue for Internet governance and that alternatives should be sought.
TLD expansion and concerns about specific top-level domains
During 2011, seventy-nine companies, including The Coca-Cola Company, Hewlett-Packard, Samsung and others, signed a petition against ICANN's new TLD program (sometimes referred to as a "commercial landgrab"), in a group organized by the Association of National Advertisers. As of September 2014, this group, the Coalition for Responsible Internet Domain Oversight, that opposes the rollout of ICANN's TLD expansion program, has been joined by 102 associations and 79 major companies. Partly as a response to this criticism, ICANN initiated an effort to protect trademarks in domain name registrations, which eventually culminated in the establishment of the Trademark Clearinghouse.
.sucks domain
ICANN has received more than $60 million from gTLD auctions, and has accepted the controversial domain name ".sucks" (referring to the primarily US slang for being inferior or objectionable). sucks domains are owned and controlled by the Vox Populi Registry which won the rights for .sucks gTLD in November 2014.
The .sucks domain registrar has been described as "predatory, exploitive and coercive" by the Intellectual Property Constituency that advises the ICANN board. When the .sucks registry announced their pricing model, "most brand owners were upset and felt like they were being penalized by having to pay more to protect their brands." Because of the low utility of the ".sucks" domain, most fees come from "Brand Protection" customers registering their trademarks to prevent domains being registered.
Canadian brands had complained that they were being charged "exorbitant" prices to register their trademarks as premium names. FTC chair Edith Ramirez has written to ICANN to say the agency will take action against the .sucks owner if "we have reason to believe an entity has engaged in deceptive or unfair practices in violation of Section 5 of the FTC Act". The Register reported that intellectual property lawyers are infuriated that "the dot-sucks registry was charging trademark holders $2,500 for .sucks domains and everyone else $10."
U.S. Representative Bob Goodlatte has said that trademark holders are "being shaken down" by the registry's fees. Jay Rockefeller says that .sucks is "a predatory shakedown scheme" and "Approving '.sucks', a gTLD with little or no public interest value, will have the effect of undermining the credibility ICANN has slowly been building with skeptical stakeholders."
.islam, .halal top level domains
In a long-running dispute, ICANN has so far declined to allow a Turkish company to purchase the .islam and .halal gTLDs, after the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation objected that the gTLDs should be administered by an organization that represents all the world's 1.6 billion Muslims. After a number of attempts to resolve the issue the domains are still held "on hold".
.org price cap removal
In April 2019, ICANN proposed an end to the price cap of org domains and effectively removed it in July in spite of having received 3,252 opposing comments and only six in favor. A few months later, the owner of the domain, the Public Interest Registry, proposed to sell the domain to investment firm Ethos Capital.
.amazon gTLD dispute
In May 2019, ICANN decided in favor of granting exclusive administration rights to amazon.com for the .amazon gTLD after a 7 year long dispute with the Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization (ACTO).
See also
- Alternative DNS root
- Domain name scams
- Domain Name System
- Domain name
- Domain name registrar
- Internationalized domain name
- Top-level domain
- Country code top-level domain
- Generic top-level domain
- Geographic top-level domain (GeoTLD)
- IEEE Registration Authority
- Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA)
- InterNIC
- List of ICANN meetings
- List of United States quangos
- Montevideo Statement on the Future of Internet Cooperation
- NetMundial Initiative, a plan for governance of the Internet
- Network Solutions
- OneWebDay
- OpenNIC
- Trademark Clearinghouse
- Uniform Domain-Name Dispute-Resolution Policy
- WHOIS
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- "Available Pool of Unallocated IPv4 Internet Addresses Now Completely Emptied", News release, Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), February 3, 2011.
- New Internet Name Rule Opens Door to Huge Changes. Voice of America, June 20, 2011. Retrieved June 20, 2011.
- Internet minders OK vast expansion of domain names, Associated Press, June 20, 2011. Retrieved June 20, 2011.
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- ICANN increases web domain suffixes, BBC News, June 20, 2011. Retrieved June 20, 2011.
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Further reading
- Brito, Jerry. "ICANN vs. the World." TIME. March 5, 2011. Retrieved March 6, 2011.
- Franda, Marcus, The Emergence of an International Regime, ISBN 1-55587-999-3
- Wass, Erica, Addressing the World, ISBN 0-7425-2809-X
- Paré, Daniel J. Internet Governance in Transition, ISBN 0-7425-1846-9
- Mueller, Milton L. Ruling the Root, ISBN 0-262-13412-8
- Froomkin, Michael (October 2000). "Wrong Turn in Cyberspace" (PDF). Duke Law Journal. 50 (17). doi:10.2307/1373113. hdl:10535/3464. ISSN 0012-7086. JSTOR 1373113. LCCN sf82007022. OCLC 1567016. Retrieved September 20, 2014.
- Hill, Richard (2014). "Chapter 4 Internet Governance: The Last Gasp of Colonialism, or Imperialism by Other Means?". The Evolution of Global Internet Governance. Berlin: Springer. pp. 79–94. doi:10.1007/978-3-642-45299-4_5. ISBN 978-3-642-45298-7.
External links

- Official website
- "Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers". Internal Revenue Service filings. ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer.
- ICANN DNS Operations
- "ICANN Wiki". ICANN.
People and companies related to ICANN
- Ball, James; Mathieu-Leger, Laurence (February 28, 2014). "Who holds the seven keys to the internet?" (video). Technology.
Author: www.NiNa.Az
Publication date:
wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library, article, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games, mobile, phone, android, ios, apple, mobile phone, samsung, iphone, xiomi, xiaomi, redmi, honor, oppo, nokia, sonya, mi, pc, web, computer
The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ICANN ˈ aɪ k ae n EYE kan is a global multistakeholder group and nonprofit organization headquartered in the United States responsible for coordinating the maintenance and procedures of several databases related to the namespaces and numerical spaces of the Internet ensuring the Internet s stable and secure operation ICANN performs the actual technical maintenance work of the Central Internet Address pools and DNS root zone registries pursuant to the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority IANA function contract The contract regarding the IANA stewardship functions between ICANN and the National Telecommunications and Information Administration NTIA of the United States Department of Commerce ended on October 1 2016 formally transitioning the functions to the global multistakeholder community Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and NumbersAbbreviationICANNFoundedSeptember 30 1998 26 years ago 1998 09 30 Type501 c 3 organizationTax ID no 95 4712218FocusManage Internet Protocol numbers and Domain Name System rootHeadquartersLos Angeles California United StatesKey peopleKurt Erik Lindqvist CEO and president Tripti Sinha Chair of the Board Jon Postel founder Employees428Websiteicann wbr org Internet history timeline Early research and development 1960 1964 RAND networking concepts developed 1962 1964 ARPA networking ideas 1965 1965 NPL network concepts conceived 1966 1966 Merit Network founded 1967 1967 ARPANET planning begins 1967 1967 Symposium on Operating Systems Principles 1969 1969 NPL followed by the ARPANET carry their first packets 1970 1970 Network Information Center NIC 1971 1971 Tymnet switched circuit network 1972 1972 Merit Network s packet switched network operational 1972 1972 Internet Assigned Numbers Authority IANA established 1973 1973 CYCLADES network demonstrated 1973 1973 PARC Universal Packet development begins 1974 1974 Transmission Control Program specification published 1975 1975 Telenet commercial packet switched network 1976 1976 X 25 protocol approved and deployed on public data networks 1978 1978 Minitel introduced 1979 1979 Internet Activities Board IAB 1980 1980 USENET news using UUCP 1980 1980 Ethernet standard introduced 1981 1981 BITNET established Merging the networks and creating the Internet 1981 1981 Computer Science Network CSNET 1982 1982 TCP IP protocol suite formalized 1982 1982 Simple Mail Transfer Protocol SMTP 1983 1983 Domain Name System DNS 1983 1983 MILNET split off from ARPANET 1984 1984 OSI Reference Model released 1985 1985 First COM domain name registered 1986 1986 NSFNET with 56 kbit s links 1986 1986 Internet Engineering Task Force IETF 1987 1987 UUNET founded 1988 1988 NSFNET upgraded to 1 5 Mbit s T1 1988 1988 Morris worm 1988 1988 Complete Internet protocol suite 1989 1989 Border Gateway Protocol BGP 1989 1989 PSINet founded allows commercial traffic 1989 1989 Federal Internet Exchanges FIX East FIXes 1990 1990 GOSIP without TCP IP 1990 1990 ARPANET decommissioned 1990 1990 Advanced Network and Services ANS 1990 1990 UUNET Alternet allows commercial traffic 1990 1990 Archie search engine 1991 1991 Wide area information server WAIS 1991 1991 Gopher 1991 1991 Commercial Internet eXchange CIX 1991 1991 ANS CO RE allows commercial traffic 1991 1991 World Wide Web WWW 1992 1992 NSFNET upgraded to 45 Mbit s T3 1992 1992 Internet Society ISOC established 1993 1993 Classless Inter Domain Routing CIDR 1993 1993 InterNIC established 1993 1993 AOL added USENET access 1993 1993 Mosaic web browser released 1994 1994 Full text web search engines 1994 1994 North American Network Operators Group NANOG established Commercialization privatization broader access leads to the modern Internet 1995 1995 New Internet architecture with commercial ISPs connected at NAPs 1995 1995 NSFNET decommissioned 1995 1995 GOSIP updated to allow TCP IP 1995 1995 very high speed Backbone Network Service vBNS 1995 1995 IPv6 proposed 1996 1996 AOL changes pricing model from hourly to monthly 1998 1998 Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ICANN 1999 1999 IEEE 802 11b wireless networking 1999 1999 Internet2 Abilene Network 1999 1999 vBNS allows broader access 2000 2000 Dot com bubble bursts 2001 2001 New top level domain names activated 2001 2001 Code Red I Code Red II and Nimda worms 2003 2003 UN World Summit on the Information Society WSIS phase I 2003 2003 National LambdaRail founded 2004 2004 UN Working Group on Internet Governance WGIG 2005 2005 UN WSIS phase II 2006 2006 First meeting of the Internet Governance Forum 2010 2010 First internationalized country code top level domains registered 2012 2012 ICANN begins accepting applications for new generic top level domain names 2013 2013 Montevideo Statement on the Future of Internet Cooperation 2014 2014 NetMundial international Internet governance proposal 2016 2016 ICANN contract with U S Dept of Commerce ends IANA oversight passes to the global Internet community on October 1st Examples of Internet services 1989 1989 AOL dial up service provider email instant messaging and web browser 1990 1990 IMDb Internet movie database 1994 1994 Yahoo web directory 1995 1995 Amazon online retailer 1995 1995 eBay online auction and shopping 1995 1995 Craigslist classified advertisements 1995 1995 AltaVista search engine 1996 1996 Outlook formerly Hotmail free web based e mail 1996 1996 RankDex search engine 1997 1997 Google Search 1997 1997 Babel Fish automatic translation 1998 1998 Yahoo Groups formerly Yahoo Clubs 1998 1998 PayPal Internet payment system 1998 1998 Rotten Tomatoes review aggregator 1999 1999 2ch Anonymous textboard 1999 1999 i mode mobile internet service 1999 1999 Napster peer to peer file sharing 2000 2000 Baidu search engine 2001 2001 2chan Anonymous imageboard 2001 2001 BitTorrent peer to peer file sharing 2001 2001 Wikipedia the free encyclopedia 2003 2003 LinkedIn business networking 2003 2003 Myspace social networking site 2003 2003 Skype Internet voice calls 2003 2003 iTunes Store 2003 2003 4chan Anonymous imageboard 2003 2003 The Pirate Bay torrent file host 2004 2004 Facebook social networking site 2004 2004 Podcast media file series 2004 2004 Flickr image hosting 2005 2005 YouTube video sharing 2005 2005 Reddit link voting 2005 2005 Google Earth virtual globe 2006 2006 Twitter microblogging 2007 2007 WikiLeaks anonymous news and information leaks 2007 2007 Google Street View 2007 2007 Kindle e reader and virtual bookshop 2008 2008 Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud EC2 2008 2008 Dropbox cloud based file hosting 2008 2008 Encyclopedia of Life a collaborative encyclopedia intended to document all living species 2008 2008 Spotify a DRM based music streaming service 2009 2009 Bing search engine 2009 2009 Google Docs Web based word processor spreadsheet presentation form and data storage service 2009 2009 Kickstarter a threshold pledge system 2009 2009 Bitcoin a digital currency 2010 2010 Instagram photo sharing and social networking 2011 2011 Google social networking 2011 2011 Snapchat photo sharing 2012 2012 Coursera massive open online courses 2016 2016 TikTok video sharing and social networking ICANN headquarters in the Playa Vista neighborhood of Los Angeles Much of its work has concerned the Internet s global Domain Name System DNS including policy development for internationalization of the DNS introduction of new generic top level domains TLDs and the operation of root name servers The numbering facilities ICANN manages include the Internet Protocol address spaces for IPv4 and IPv6 and the assignment of address blocks to regional Internet registries ICANN also maintains registries of Internet Protocol identifiers ICANN s primary principles of operation have been described as helping preserve the operational stability of the Internet promoting competition achieving broad representation of the global Internet community and developing policies appropriate to its mission through bottom up consensus based processes The organization has often included a motto of One World One Internet on annual reports beginning in 2010 on less formal publications as well as their official website ICANN was officially incorporated in the state of California on September 30 1998 Originally headquartered in Marina del Rey in the same building as the University of Southern California s Information Sciences Institute ISI its offices are now in the Playa Vista neighborhood of Los Angeles HistoryBefore the establishment of ICANN the IANA function of administering registries of Internet protocol identifiers including the distributing top level domains and IP addresses was performed by Jon Postel a computer science researcher who had been involved in the creation of ARPANET first at UCLA and then at USC ISI In 1997 Postel testified before Congress that this had come about as a side task to this research work The Information Sciences Institute was funded by the U S Department of Defense as was SRI International s Network Information Center which also performed some assigned name functions As the Internet grew and expanded globally the U S Department of Commerce initiated a process to establish a new organization to perform the IANA functions On January 30 1998 the National Telecommunications and Information Administration NTIA an agency of the U S Department of Commerce issued for comment A Proposal to Improve the Technical Management of Internet Names and Addresses The proposed rule making or Green Paper was published in the Federal Register on February 20 1998 providing opportunity for public comment NTIA received more than 650 comments as of March 23 1998 when the comment period closed The Green Paper proposed certain actions designed to privatize the management of Internet names and addresses in a manner that allows for the development of competition and facilitates global participation in Internet management The Green Paper proposed for discussion a variety of issues relating to DNS management including private sector creation of a new not for profit corporation the new corporation managed by a globally and functionally representative board of directors ICANN was formed in response to this policy ICANN managed the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority IANA under contract to the United States Department of Commerce DOC and pursuant to an agreement with the IETF ICANN was incorporated in California on September 30 1998 with entrepreneur and philanthropist Esther Dyson as founding chairwoman It is a public benefit nonprofit corporation organized under the California Nonprofit Public Benefit Corporation Law for charitable and public purposes ICANN was established in California due to the presence of Postel who was a founder of ICANN and was set to be its first Chief Technology Officer prior to his unexpected death ICANN formerly operated from the same Marina del Rey building where Postel formerly worked which is home to an office of the Information Sciences Institute at the University of Southern California However ICANN s headquarters is now located in the nearby Playa Vista neighborhood of Los Angeles Per its original by laws primary responsibility for policy formation in ICANN was to be delegated to three supporting organizations Address Supporting Organization Domain Name Supporting Organization and Protocol Supporting Organization each of which was to develop and recommend substantive policies and procedures for the management of the identifiers within their respective scope They were also required to be financially independent from ICANN As expected the regional Internet registries and the IETF agreed to serve as the Address Supporting Organization and Protocol Supporting Organization respectively and ICANN issued a call for interested parties to propose the structure and composition of the Domain Name Supporting Organization In March 1999 the ICANN Board based in part on the DNSO proposals received decided instead on an alternate construction for the DNSO which delineated specific constituencies bodies within ICANN itself thus adding primary responsibility for DNS policy development to ICANN s existing duties of oversight and coordination On July 26 2006 the United States government renewed the contract with ICANN for performance of the IANA function for an additional one to five years The context of ICANN s relationship with the U S government was clarified on September 29 2006 when ICANN signed a new memorandum of understanding with the United States Department of Commerce DOC This document gave the DOC oversight over some of the ICANN operations In July 2008 the DOC reiterated an earlier statement that it has no plans to transition management of the authoritative root zone file to ICANN The letter also stresses the separate roles of the IANA and VeriSign On September 30 2009 ICANN signed an agreement with the DOC known as the Affirmation of Commitments that confirmed ICANN s commitment to a multistakeholder governance model but did not remove it from DOC oversight and control The Affirmation of Commitments which aimed to create international oversight ran into criticism On March 10 2016 ICANN and the DOC signed a historic culminating agreement to finally remove ICANN and IANA from the control and oversight of the DOC On October 1 2016 ICANN was freed from U S government oversight Since its creation ICANN has been the subject of criticism and controversy In 2000 professor Michael Froomkin of the University of Miami School of Law argued that ICANN s relationship with the U S Department of Commerce is illegal in violation of either the Constitution or federal statutes On June 10 2024 it was announced that Kurt Erik Lindqvist who has been CEO of the London Internet Exchange since 2019 was to become the new president and CEO of ICANN on December 5 2024 Notable eventsOn March 18 2002 publicly elected At Large Representative for North America board member Karl Auerbach sued ICANN in the Superior Court of Los Angeles County California to gain access to ICANN s accounting records without restriction Judge Dzintra Janavs ruled in Auerbach s favor on July 29 2002 During September and October 2003 ICANN played a crucial role in the conflict over VeriSign s wild card DNS service Site Finder After an open letter from ICANN issuing an ultimatum to VeriSign later endorsed by the Internet Architecture Board the company voluntarily ended the service on October 4 2003 After this action VeriSign filed a lawsuit against ICANN on February 27 2004 claiming that ICANN had exceeded its authority By this lawsuit VeriSign sought to reduce ambiguity about ICANN s authority The antitrust component of VeriSign s claim was dismissed during August 2004 VeriSign s challenge that ICANN overstepped its contractual rights is currently outstanding A proposed settlement already approved by ICANN s board would resolve VeriSign s challenge to ICANN in exchange for the right to increase pricing on com domains At the meeting of ICANN in Rome which took place from March 2 to 6 2004 ICANN agreed to ask approval of the U S Department of Commerce for the Waiting List Service of VeriSign citation needed On May 17 2004 ICANN published a proposed budget for the year 2004 05 It included proposals to increase the openness and professionalism of its operations and increased its proposed spending from US 8 27 million to 15 83 million The increase was to be funded by the introduction of new top level domains charges to domain registries and a fee for some domain name registrations renewals and transfers initially US 0 20 for all domains within a country code top level domain and US 0 25 for all others citation needed The Council of European National Top Level Domain Registries CENTR which represents the Internet registries of 39 countries rejected the increase accusing ICANN of a lack of financial prudence and criticizing what it describes as ICANN s unrealistic political and operational targets Despite the criticism the registry agreement for the top level domains jobs and travel includes a US 2 fee on every domain the licensed companies sell or renew After a second round of negotiations during 2004 the TLDs eu asia travel jobs mobi and cat were introduced during 2005 ICANN meeting Los Angeles USA 2007 The sign refers to Vint Cerf then chairman of the board of directors who is working on the so called Interplanetary Internet On February 28 2006 ICANN s board approved a settlement with VeriSign in the lawsuit resulting from SiteFinder that involved allowing VeriSign the registry to raise its registration fees by up to 7 a year This was criticised by a few members of the U S House of Representatives Small Business Committee During February 2007 ICANN began procedures to end accreditation of one of their registrars RegisterFly amid charges and lawsuits involving fraud and criticism of ICANN s management of the situation ICANN has been the subject of criticism as a result of its handling of RegisterFly and the harm caused to thousands of clients as a result of what has been termed ICANN s laissez faire attitude toward customer allegations of fraud On May 23 2008 ICANN issued enforcement notices against ten accredited registrars and announced this through a press release entitled Worst Spam Offenders Notified by ICANN Compliance system working to correct Whois and other issues This was largely in response to a report issued by KnujOn called The 10 Worst Registrars in terms of spam advertised junk product sites and compliance failure The mention of the word spam in the title of the ICANN memo is somewhat misleading since ICANN does not address issues of spam or email abuse Website content and usage are not within ICANN s mandate However the KnujOn report details how various registrars have not complied with their contractual obligations under the Registrar Accreditation Agreement RAA The main point of the KnujOn research was to demonstrate the relationships between compliance failure illicit product traffic and spam The report demonstrated that out of 900 ICANN accredited registrars fewer than 20 held 90 of the web domains advertised in spam These same registrars were also most frequently cited by KnujOn as failing to resolve complaints made through the Whois Data Problem Reporting System WDPRS On June 26 2008 the ICANN Board started a new process of TLD naming policy to take a significant step forward on the introduction of new generic top level domains This program envisioned the availability of many new or already proposed domains as well a new application and implementation process On October 1 2008 ICANN issued breach notices against Joker and Beijing Innovative Linkage Technology Ltd after further researching reports and complaints issued by KnujOn These notices gave the registrars 15 days to fix their Whois investigation efforts In 2010 ICANN approved a major review of its policies with respect to accountability transparency and public participation by the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University This external review was an assistance of the work of ICANN s Accountability and Transparency Review team On February 3 2011 ICANN announced that it had distributed the last batch of its remaining IPv4 addresses to the world s five regional Internet registries the organizations that manage IP addresses in different regions These registries began assigning the final IPv4 addresses within their regions until they ran out completely On June 20 2011 the ICANN board voted to end most restrictions on the names of generic top level domains gTLD Companies and organizations became able to choose essentially arbitrary top level Internet domain names The use of non Latin characters such as Cyrillic Arabic Chinese etc is also allowed in gTLDs ICANN began accepting applications for new gTLDS on January 12 2012 The initial price to apply for a new gTLD was set at 185 000 and the annual renewal fee is 25 000 During December 2011 the Federal Trade Commission stated ICANN had long failed to provide safeguards that protect consumers from online swindlers Following the 2013 NSA spying scandal ICANN endorsed the Montevideo Statement although no direct connection between these could be proven On October 1 2016 ICANN ended its contract with the United States Department of Commerce National Telecommunications and Information Administration NTIA and entered the private sector The European Union s General Data Protection Regulation active since May 25 2018 has had an impact on ICANN s operations which had to be fixed via some last minute changes clarification needed StructureFrom its founding to the present ICANN has been formally organized as a nonprofit corporation for charitable and public purposes under the California Nonprofit Public Benefit Corporation Law It is managed by a 16 member board of directors composed of eight members selected by a nominating committee on which all the constituencies of ICANN are represented six representatives of its Supporting Organizations sub groups that deal with specific sections of the policies under ICANN s purview an at large seat filled by an at large organization and the president CEO appointed by the board There are currently three supporting organizations the Generic Names Supporting Organization GNSO deals with policy making on generic top level domains gTLDs the Country Code Names Supporting Organization ccNSO deals with policy making on country code top level domains ccTLDs the Address Supporting Organization ASO deals with policy making on IP addresses ICANN also relies on some advisory committees and other advisory mechanisms to receive advice on the interests and needs of stakeholders that do not directly participate in the Supporting Organizations These include the Governmental Advisory Committee GAC which is composed of representatives of a large number of national governments from all over the world the At Large Advisory Committee ALAC which is composed of individual Internet users from around the world selected by each of the Regional At Large Organizations RALO and Nominating Committee the Root Server System Advisory Committee which provides advice on the operation of the DNS root server system the Security and Stability Advisory Committee SSAC which is composed of Internet experts who study security issues pertaining to ICANN s mandate and the Technical Liaison Group TLG which is composed of representatives of other international technical organizations that focus at least in part on the Internet Governmental Advisory Committee Governmental Advisory Committee representatives Representatives The Governmental Advisory Committee has representatives from 179 states and 38 Observer organizations including the Holy See Cook Islands Niue Taiwan Hong Kong Bermuda Montserrat the European Commission and the African Union Commission Observers In addition the following organizations are GAC Observers African Telecommunications Union Asia Pacific Telecommunity Caribbean Telecommunications Union CTU Commonwealth Telecommunications Organisation CTO Council of Europe Economic Commission for Africa ECA European Broadcasting Union European Organization for Nuclear Research CERN European Space Agency International Labour Office International Telecommunication Union ITU International Criminal Police Organization INTERPOL International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement Latin American Association of Telecom Regulatory Agencies REGULATEL League of Arab States New Partnership for Africa s Development NEPAD Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development The Organization for Islamic Cooperation Organization of American States Organisation internationale de la Francophonie OIF Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat of the Pacific Community SPC Inter American Telecommunication Commission CITEL International Criminal Court United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO Universal Postal Union World Bank World Health Organization WHO World Intellectual Property Organization WIPO World Meteorological Organization World Trade Organization Trusted Community Representatives As the operator of the IANA domain name functions ICANN is responsible for the DNSSEC management of the root zone While day to day operations are managed by ICANN and Verisign the trust is rooted in a group of Trusted Community Representatives The members of this group must not be affiliated with ICANN but are instead members of the broader DNS community volunteering to become a Trusted Community Representative The role of the representatives are primarily to take part in regular key ceremonies at a physical location organized by ICANN and to safeguard the key materials in between Democratic input In the Memorandum of understanding that set up the relationship between ICANN and the U S government ICANN was given a mandate requiring that it operate in a bottom up consensus driven democratic manner However the attempts that ICANN has made to establish an organizational structure that would allow wide input from the global Internet community did not produce results amenable to the current Board As a result the At Large constituency and direct election of board members by the global Internet community were soon abandoned ICANN holds periodic public meetings rotated between continents for the purpose of encouraging global participation in its processes Resolutions of the ICANN Board preliminary reports and minutes of the meetings are published on the ICANN website sometimes in real time However there are criticisms from ICANN constituencies including the Noncommercial Users Constituency NCUC and the At Large Advisory Committee ALAC that there is not enough public disclosure and that too many discussions and decisions take place out of sight of the public During the early 2000s there had been speculation that the United Nations might assume control of ICANN followed by a negative reaction from the U S government and worries about a division of the Internet At UN s World Summit on the Information Society in Tunisia in November 2005 the world s governments agreed not to get involved in the day to day and technical operations of ICANN However they also agreed to establish an international Internet Governance Forum with a consultative role on the future governance of the Internet ICANN s Government Advisory Committee is currently established to provide advice to ICANN regarding public policy issues and has participation by many of the world s governments Some have attempted to argue that ICANN was never given the authority to decide policy e g choose new TLDs or exclude other interested parties who refuse to pay ICANN s US 185 000 fee but was to be a technical caretaker Critics who suggest that ICANN should not be allowed to impose business rules on market participants and that all TLDs should be added on a first come first served basis and the market should be the arbiter of who succeeds and who does not ActivitiesUniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy UDRP One task that ICANN was asked to do was to address the issue of domain name ownership resolution for generic top level domains gTLDs ICANN s attempt at such a policy was drafted in close cooperation with the World Intellectual Property Organization WIPO and the result has now become known as the Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy UDRP This policy essentially attempts to provide a mechanism for rapid cheap and reasonable resolution of domain name conflicts avoiding the traditional court system for disputes by allowing cases to be brought to one of a set of bodies that arbitrate domain name disputes According to ICANN policy domain registrants must agree to be bound by the UDRP they cannot get a domain name without agreeing to this Examination of the UDRP decision patterns has caused some to conclude that compulsory domain name arbitration is less likely to give a fair hearing to domain name owners asserting defenses under the First Amendment and other laws compared to the federal courts of appeal in particular Proposed elimination of public DNS whois In 2013 the initial report of ICANN s Expert Working Group has recommended that the present form of Whois a utility that allows anyone to know who has registered a domain name on the Internet should be abandoned It recommends it be replaced with a system that keeps most registration information secret or gated from most Internet users and only discloses information for permissible purposes ICANN s list of permissible purposes includes domain name research domain name sale and purchase regulatory enforcement personal data protection legal actions and abuse mitigation Whois has been a key tool of investigative journalists interested in determining who was disseminating information on the Internet The use of whois by journalists is not included in the list of permissible purposes in the initial report Proposals for reformProposals have been made to internationalize ICANN s monitoring responsibilities currently the responsibility of the US to transform it into an international organization under international law and to establish an intergovernmental mechanism enabling governments on an equal footing to carry out their role and responsibilities in international public policy issues pertaining to the Internet citation needed IBSA proposal 2011 One controversial proposal resulting from a September 2011 summit between India Brazil and South Africa IBSA would seek to move Internet governance into a UN Committee on Internet Related Policy UN CIRP The action was a reaction to a perception that the principles of the 2005 Tunis Agenda for the Information Society have not been met The statement proposed the creation of a new political organization operating as a component of the United Nations to provide policy recommendations for the consideration of technical organizations such as ICANN and international bodies such as the ITU Subsequent to public criticisms the Indian government backed away from the proposal Montevideo Statement on the Future of Internet Cooperation 2013 On October 7 2013 the Montevideo Statement on the Future of Internet Cooperation was released by the managers of a number of organizations involved in coordinating the Internet s global technical infrastructure loosely known as the I or I star group Among other things the statement expressed strong concern over the undermining of the trust and confidence of Internet users globally due to recent revelations of pervasive monitoring and surveillance and called for accelerating the globalization of ICANN and IANA functions towards an environment in which all stakeholders including all governments participate on an equal footing This desire to reduce United States association with the internet is considered a reaction to the ongoing NSA surveillance scandal The statement was signed by the managers of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ICANN the Internet Engineering Task Force the Internet Architecture Board the World Wide Web Consortium the Internet Society and the five regional Internet address registries African Network Information Center American Registry for Internet Numbers Asia Pacific Network Information Centre Latin America and Caribbean Internet Addresses Registry and Reseaux IP Europeens Network Coordination Centre Global Multistakeholder Meeting on the Future of Internet Governance 2013 During October 2013 Fadi Chehade former president and CEO of ICANN met with Brazilian president Dilma Rousseff in Brasilia Upon Chehade s invitation the two announced that Brazil would host an international summit on Internet governance during April 2014 The announcement came after the 2013 disclosures of mass surveillance by the U S government and Rousseff s speech at the opening session of the 2013 United Nations General Assembly where she strongly criticized the American surveillance program as a breach of international law The Global Multistakeholder Meeting on the Future of Internet Governance NET mundial will include representatives of government industry civil society and academia citation needed At the IGF VIII meeting in Bali in October 2013 a commenter noted that Brazil intends the meeting to be a summit in the sense that it will be high level with decision making authority The organizers of the NET mundial meeting have decided that an online forum called 1net set up by the I group will be a major conduit of non governmental input into the three committees preparing for the meeting in April The Obama administration that had joined critics of ICANN during 2011 announced in March 2014 that they intended to transition away from oversight of the IANA functions contract The current contract that the United States Department of Commerce has with ICANN expired in 2015 in its place the NTIA will transition oversight of the IANA functions to the global multistakeholder community NetMundial Initiative 2014 The NetMundial Initiative is a plan for international governance of the Internet that was first proposed at the Global Multistakeholder Meeting on the Future of Internet Governance GMMFIG conference April 23 24 2014 and later developed into the NetMundial Initiative by ICANN CEO Fadi Chehade along with representatives of the World Economic Forum WEF and the Brazilian Internet Steering Committee Comite Gestor da Internet no Brasil commonly referred to as CGI br The meeting produced a nonbinding statement in favor of consensus based decision making It represented a compromise and did not harshly condemn mass surveillance or support net neutrality despite initial endorsement for that from Brazil The final resolution says ICANN should be controlled internationally by September 2015 A minority of governments including Russia China Iran and India were unhappy with the final resolution and wanted multilateral management for the Internet such as a UN based model rather than broader multistakeholder management A month later the Panel on Global Internet Cooperation and Governance Mechanisms convened by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ICANN and the World Economic Forum WEF with assistance from The Annenberg Foundation endorsed and included the NetMundial statement in its own report During June 2014 France strongly attacked ICANN saying ICANN is not a fit venue for Internet governance and that alternatives should be sought TLD expansion and concerns about specific top level domainsDuring 2011 seventy nine companies including The Coca Cola Company Hewlett Packard Samsung and others signed a petition against ICANN s new TLD program sometimes referred to as a commercial landgrab in a group organized by the Association of National Advertisers As of September 2014 this group the Coalition for Responsible Internet Domain Oversight that opposes the rollout of ICANN s TLD expansion program has been joined by 102 associations and 79 major companies Partly as a response to this criticism ICANN initiated an effort to protect trademarks in domain name registrations which eventually culminated in the establishment of the Trademark Clearinghouse sucks domain ICANN has received more than 60 million from gTLD auctions and has accepted the controversial domain name sucks referring to the primarily US slang for being inferior or objectionable sucks domains are owned and controlled by the Vox Populi Registry which won the rights for sucks gTLD in November 2014 The sucks domain registrar has been described as predatory exploitive and coercive by the Intellectual Property Constituency that advises the ICANN board When the sucks registry announced their pricing model most brand owners were upset and felt like they were being penalized by having to pay more to protect their brands Because of the low utility of the sucks domain most fees come from Brand Protection customers registering their trademarks to prevent domains being registered Canadian brands had complained that they were being charged exorbitant prices to register their trademarks as premium names FTC chair Edith Ramirez has written to ICANN to say the agency will take action against the sucks owner if we have reason to believe an entity has engaged in deceptive or unfair practices in violation of Section 5 of the FTC Act The Register reported that intellectual property lawyers are infuriated that the dot sucks registry was charging trademark holders 2 500 for sucks domains and everyone else 10 U S Representative Bob Goodlatte has said that trademark holders are being shaken down by the registry s fees Jay Rockefeller says that sucks is a predatory shakedown scheme and Approving sucks a gTLD with little or no public interest value will have the effect of undermining the credibility ICANN has slowly been building with skeptical stakeholders islam halal top level domains In a long running dispute ICANN has so far declined to allow a Turkish company to purchase the islam and halal gTLDs after the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation objected that the gTLDs should be administered by an organization that represents all the world s 1 6 billion Muslims After a number of attempts to resolve the issue the domains are still held on hold org price cap removal In April 2019 ICANN proposed an end to the price cap of org domains and effectively removed it in July in spite of having received 3 252 opposing comments and only six in favor A few months later the owner of the domain the Public Interest Registry proposed to sell the domain to investment firm Ethos Capital amazon gTLD dispute In May 2019 ICANN decided in favor of granting exclusive administration rights to amazon com for the amazon gTLD after a 7 year long dispute with the Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization ACTO See alsoAlternative DNS root Domain name scams Domain Name System Domain name Domain name registrar Internationalized domain name Top level domain Country code top level domain Generic top level domain Geographic top level domain GeoTLD IEEE Registration Authority Internet Assigned Numbers Authority IANA InterNIC List of ICANN meetings List of United States quangos Montevideo Statement on the Future of Internet Cooperation NetMundial Initiative a plan for governance of the Internet Network Solutions OneWebDay OpenNIC Trademark Clearinghouse Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy WHOISReferences 2024 Complete Report PDF ICANN Retrieved October 28 2024 ICANN Bylaws July 30 2014 Retrieved June 30 2015 Cheers to the Multistakeholder Community ICANN Final Implementation Update ICANN Stewardship of IANA Functions Transitions to Global Internet Community as Contract with U S Government Ends ICANN Statement of Assistant Secretary Strickling on IANA Functions Contract National Telecommunications and Information Administration Koppell Jonathan GS January 17 2005 Pathologies of Accountability ICANN and the Challenge of Multiple Accountabilities Disorder Public Administration Review 65 1 94 108 doi 10 1111 j 1540 6210 2005 00434 x Memorandum of understanding between the U S Department of Commerce and Internet Corporation for assigned names and numbers November 25 1998 Retrieved October 31 2015 ICANN Annual Report 2010 PDF ICANN Retrieved March 16 2023 Duran Clint ICANN Articles of Incorporation PDF ICANN Archived PDF from the original on July 5 2018 Retrieved September 18 2020 V Cerf October 17 1998 I REMEMBER IANA IETF doi 10 17487 RFC2468 RFC 2468 Zittrain Jonathan March 24 2014 No Barack Obama Isn t Handing Control of the Internet Over to China The New Republic Retrieved March 31 2014 Internet Domain Names Part I United States House of Representatives DeNardis Laura 2009 Protocol Politics The Globalization of Internet Governance MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 04257 4 NTIA PTO Internet Domain Names www ntia doc gov Management of Internet Names and Addresses Dept of Commerce NTIA Retrieved March 14 2013 Weil Nancy New U S policy turns Net governance over to private sector SunWorld Retrieved April 21 2015 Lewis Ted G 2014 Book of Extremes Why the 21st Century Isn t Like the 20th Century Springer pp 65 66 ISBN 978 3319069265 B Carpenter F Baker M Roberts June 2000 MoU Between IETF and ICANN concerning IANA IETF doi 10 17487 RFC2860 RFC 2860 a href wiki Template Citation title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link California Secretary of State Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers Archived March 21 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2009 09 18 Articles of Incorporation of Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers Los Angeles Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers November 21 1998 Retrieved February 17 2017 ICANN icann org Executive Summary of DNS ICANN Issues Berkman Center Retrieved February 22 2013 Santiago Resolutions ICANN Board Resolutions ICANN Retrieved May 22 2012 Executive Summary of DNS ICANN Now ICANN policy is being set by ambiguous so called Communities In a dramatic departure from IANA ICANN has allowed secrecy and concealment of the true ownership of domain names There are whole sets of nominee registrants whose purpose is to conceal the true ownership of domain names Issues Harvard Cyberlaw Briefing Book Berkman Center Retrieved May 21 2012 DNSO Application Timetable DNSO Retrieved May 21 2012 ICANN Board DNSO Singapore Statement ICANN Retrieved May 21 2012 DNSO Formation Concepts ICANN Retrieved May 21 2012 United States cedes control of the Internet but what now The Register July 27 2006 Wolfgang Benedek Veronika Bauer Matthias C Kettemann 2008 Internet Governance and the Information Society Global Perspectives and European Dimensions Eleven International Publishing p 16 ISBN 978 90 77596 56 2 Retrieved April 13 2012 Rebecca MacKinnon January 31 2012 Consent of the Networked The Worldwide Struggle For Internet Freedom Basic Books p 207 ISBN 978 0 465 02442 1 Retrieved April 13 2012 Bush administration annexes Internet The Register July 1 2005 U S DoC letter to ICANN s Chairman July 30 2008 Archived from the original on August 6 2008 Retrieved August 3 2008 US Government finally lets ICANN go Eileen Yu ZDNet September 30 2009 Gross Grant October 1 2009 New ICANN Agreement Runs into Criticism PC World Retrieved September 20 2014 Farrell Maria March 14 2016 Quietly symbolically US control of the internet was just ended The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved March 17 2016 The U S government no longer controls the Internet Yahoo Tech Archived from the original on October 3 2016 Retrieved October 2 2016 Fuller Kathleen E February 14 2001 ICANN The Debate Over Governing the Internet PDF Duke Law amp Technology Review Retrieved September 20 2014 Malcolm Jeremy 2008 2 1 3 Criticisms Multi Stakeholder Public Policy Governance and its Application to the Internet Governance Forum PhD Murdoch University OCLC 436943765 Retrieved September 20 2014 Froomkin Michael October 2000 Wrong Turn in Cyberspace PDF Duke Law Journal 50 17 doi 10 2307 1373113 hdl 10535 3464 ISSN 0012 7086 JSTOR 1373113 LCCN sf82007022 OCLC 1567016 Retrieved September 20 2014 ICANN Selects Next President and CEO ICANN June 10 2024 Retrieved June 11 2024 Court Grants Access to Net Regulatory Corp Records Electronic Frontier Foundation July 29 2002 Retrieved November 1 2023 Geoff Huston October 17 2003 Wildcard entries in DNS entries IAB Retrieved June 23 2008 ICANN Proposed Budget Fiscal Year 2004 2005 PDF ICANN May 17 2004 ICANN imposes 2 Internet tax The Register March 31 2005 ICANN Board Approves VeriSign Settlement Agreements Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ICANN February 28 2006 Retrieved November 1 2006 Domain name price hikes come under fire CNET News January 2 2013 Archived from the original on January 2 2013 The Register Burke Hansen Of ICANN and the Registerfly meltdown March 3 2007 Worst Spam Offenders Notified by ICANN News release Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ICANN May 23 2008 2008 ICANN Registrar Report KnujOn com Registrar Accreditation Agreement Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ICANN May 17 2001 with updates 2002 2006 32nd International Public ICANN Meeting ICANN June 22 2008 Announcement 1 October 2002 Archived February 21 2012 at the Wayback Machine Accountability and Transparency Review Team Selection of Independent Expert and Update on ATRT Review News release Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ICANN August 10 2010 The First AART Accountability and Transparency Review Team Review was Completed in December 2010 Archived July 26 2011 at the Wayback Machine Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ICANN January 17 2012 Available Pool of Unallocated IPv4 Internet Addresses Now Completely Emptied News release Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ICANN February 3 2011 New Internet Name Rule Opens Door to Huge Changes Voice of America June 20 2011 Retrieved June 20 2011 Internet minders OK vast expansion of domain names Associated Press June 20 2011 Retrieved June 20 2011 Icann to allow any word as a domain ZDNet June 20 2011 Retrieved June 20 2011 ICANN increases web domain suffixes BBC News June 20 2011 Retrieved June 20 2011 ICANN Approves Historic Change to Internet s Domain Name System Board Votes to Launch New Generic Top Level Domains News release Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ICANN June 20 2001 ICANN Approves New Top Level Domains So Prepare For Whatever Stan Schroeder Mashable Tech June 20 2011 Milian Mark December 21 2011 Keepers of the Internet face their greatest challenges ever CNN Retrieved September 20 2014 Montevideo Statement on the Future of Internet Cooperation ICANN October 7 2013 Retrieved November 27 2016 Do the NSA revelations have anything to do with Internet governance Internet Governance Project February 19 2014 Retrieved November 27 2016 Stewardship of IANA Functions Transitions to Global Internet Community as Contract with U S Government Ends ICANN icann org Retrieved October 1 2016 Vaughan Nichols Steven J ICANN makes last minute WHOIS changes to address GDPR requirements ZDNet ZDNet BYLAWS FOR INTERNET CORPORATION FOR ASSIGNED NAMES AND NUMBERS A California Nonprofit Public Benefit Corporation ICANN Retrieved April 28 2014 Generic Names Supporting Organization ICANNWiki Bylaws For Internet Corporation For Assigned Names And Numbers icann org Go to Governance Bylaws ARTICLE VIII Article X February 25 2012 Bylaws For Internet Corporation For Assigned Names And Numbers icann org Go to Governance Bylaws ARTICLE XI and ARTICLE XI A February 25 2012 Regional At Large Organisations ALAC Confluence community icann org Bylaws For Internet Corporation For Assigned Names And Numbers icann org Go to Governance Bylaws ARTICLE XI and ARTICLE XI A Section 2 February 25 2012 a href wiki Template Cite web title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint location link GAC Website Main gac icann org GAC Observers GAC Website Main gacweb icann org Archived from the original on January 19 2013 Retrieved November 26 2012 Criteria for Trusted Community Representatives IANA May 12 2017 Retrieved July 17 2020 ICANN decided to reduce direct public at large participation on March 14 2002 at a public meeting in Accra Ghana Non Commercial Users Generic Names Supporting Organization gnso icann org Public Participation in ICANN A Preliminary Study cyber harvard edu Retrieved August 1 2022 U N Summit to Focus on Internet The Washington Post December 5 2003 Power grab could split the net CNET October 3 2005 Archived from the original on July 12 2012 About GAC GAC Website gac icann org Archived from the original on July 26 2011 Weinberg Jonathan 2000 ICANN and the Problem of Legitimacy Duke Law Journal 50 1 187 260 doi 10 2307 1373114 hdl 10535 2623 ISSN 0012 7086 JSTOR 1373114 Hannibal Travis The Battle for Mindshare the Emerging Consensus that the First Amendment Protects Corporate Criticism and Parody on the Internet 10 Virginia Journal of Law and Technology 3 32 34 2005 Vjolt net Initial Report from the Expert Working Group on gTLD Directory Services A Next Generation Registration Directory Service PDF ICANN Expert Working Group June 24 2013 Retrieved September 23 2013 Murphy Kevin June 13 2014 Whois killer is a recipe for a clusterfuck Domain Incite Retrieved June 21 2014 Intellectual Property Solutions amp Legal Support Services Archived September 21 2013 at the Wayback Machine CPA Global Retrieved April 28 2014 Sjmc Common Sense Journalism Jour sc edu Retrieved April 28 2014 Recommendations from the IBSA India Brazil South Africa Multistakeholder meeting on Global Internet Governance Archived October 5 2011 at the Wayback Machine September 1 2 2011 Rio de Janeiro Brazil Tunis Agenda for the Information Society World Summit on the Information Society November 18 2005 India s Statement Proposing UN Committee for Internet Related Policy Centre for Internet and Society Retrieved August 20 2015 Kaul Mahima India changes its internet governance position backs away from UN proposal UNCUT Archived from the original on November 3 2012 Retrieved March 15 2013 Montevideo Statement on the Future of Internet Cooperation ICANN October 7 2013 Retrieved October 12 2013 Brazil s anti NSA prez urged to SNATCH keys to the internet from America Rik Myslewski The Register October 11 2013 Retrieved October 11 2013 Milton Mueller November 19 2013 Booting up Brazil IGP Blog Retrieved February 11 2014 Entrevista com Fadi Chehade Brasil sediara encontro mundial de governanca da internet em 2014 Palacio do Planalto October 9 2013 Retrieved March 4 2014 Chair s Summary Archived April 23 2022 at the Wayback Machine Eighth Meeting of the Internet Governance Forum IGF Bali Indonesia October 22 25 2013 Retrieved November 5 2013 CENTR Internet Governance in 2013 and What s Coming Up in 2014 CircleID January 27 2014 Retrieved February 11 2014 Paul Wilson November 29 2013 What Is 1net to Me CircleID blog Retrieved February 11 2014 Shapira Ian March 1 2011 Obama administration joins critics of U S nonprofit group that oversees Internet The Washington Post Retrieved September 20 2014 NTIA Announces Intent to Transition Key Internet Domain Name Functions NTIA Retrieved October 25 2014 Future of the internet debated at NetMundial in Brazil BBC News April 23 2014 Retrieved June 2 2014 NETmundial Multistakeholder Statement Concludes Act One of 2014 Internet Governance Trifecta CircleID May 3 2014 Retrieved June 2 2014 ICANN Releases Roadmap Timeline for Future Management of Internet PC Tech Magazine May 21 2014 Retrieved June 2 2014 NETmundial Initiative Debrief with Founding Partners Archived from the original on February 9 2015 Retrieved June 2 2014 Public Declaration on the NETmundial Initiative issued by members of the board of CGI br Retrieved June 2 2014 At NETmundial the U S Kept Its Companies on the Global Stage Bloomberg BusinessWeek April 30 2014 Archived from the original on April 30 2014 Retrieved June 2 2014 The future of the internet Business Standard May 3 2014 Retrieved June 2 2014 Towards a Collaborative Decentralized Internet Governance Ecosystem report by the Panel on Global Internet Cooperation and Governance Mechanisms May 20 2014 Archived from the original on June 6 2014 Retrieved June 2 2014 France attacks ICANN as unfit for internet governance Yahoo News Agence France Presse June 25 2014 Retrieved September 20 2014 Arthur Charles June 13 2012 Icann criticised over commercial landgrab of internet The Guardian Retrieved September 20 2014 Chappell Bill June 14 2012 ICANN s Call For New Domain Names Brings Criticism And 357 Million NPR Retrieved September 20 2014 Coalition for Responsible Internet Domain Oversight CRIDO ANA Retrieved September 20 2014 ICANN banked 60m from dot word auctions Just what exactly is it going to spend it all on The Register April 17 2015 ICANN urges US Canada Help us stop the predatory monster we created dot sucks The Register April 10 2015 Dot Sucks Web Address Retrieved November 1 2018 Is SUCKS Pricing Model Gaining Traction With Other Registries CircleID June 25 2015 Guardian Staff March 23 2015 Why You Should Buy Your Dot Sucks Domain Name The Guardian Retrieved November 1 2018 Canada weighs in on sucks debate IP Pro June 19 2015 Archived from the original on June 26 2015 Retrieved June 26 2015 Canada to ICANN in dot sucks dot rumble Take off you hoser The Register June 15 2015 A Debate Over the Domain sucks Wall Street Journal May 19 2015 Murphy Kevin November 14 2013 Will ICANN be forced to reject Islamic gTLDs DomainIncite Retrieved May 3 2019 McCarthy Kieren July 30 2018 The internet s very own Muslim ban continues DNS overlord insists it can freeze dot words The Register Retrieved May 3 2019 McCarthy Kieren April 26 2019 Internet industry freaks out over proposed unlimited price hikes on org domain names The Register Retrieved November 23 2019 Lee Timothy B July 1 2019 ICANN eliminates org domain price caps despite lopsided opposition Ars Technica Retrieved November 23 2019 McCarthy Kieren November 20 2019 Internet world despairs as non profit org sold for to private equity firm price caps axed The Register Retrieved November 23 2019 Amazon wins amazon domain name aggravating South American region and undermining digital commons June 21 2019 Darlington Shasta April 18 2019 Battle for amazon Domain Pits Retailer Against South American Nations The New York Times Archived from the original on January 3 2022 Further readingBrito Jerry ICANN vs the World TIME March 5 2011 Retrieved March 6 2011 Franda Marcus The Emergence of an International Regime ISBN 1 55587 999 3 Wass Erica Addressing the World ISBN 0 7425 2809 X Pare Daniel J Internet Governance in Transition ISBN 0 7425 1846 9 Mueller Milton L Ruling the Root ISBN 0 262 13412 8 Froomkin Michael October 2000 Wrong Turn in Cyberspace PDF Duke Law Journal 50 17 doi 10 2307 1373113 hdl 10535 3464 ISSN 0012 7086 JSTOR 1373113 LCCN sf82007022 OCLC 1567016 Retrieved September 20 2014 Hill Richard 2014 Chapter 4 Internet Governance The Last Gasp of Colonialism or Imperialism by Other Means The Evolution of Global Internet Governance Berlin Springer pp 79 94 doi 10 1007 978 3 642 45299 4 5 ISBN 978 3 642 45298 7 External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to ICANN Official website Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers Internal Revenue Service filings ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer ICANN DNS Operations ICANN Wiki ICANN People and companies related to ICANN Ball James Mathieu Leger Laurence February 28 2014 Who holds the seven keys to the internet video Technology