ICANN SELECTS MEMBERSHIP COMMITTEE MEMBERS.
The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) is
slowly forming itself into a body capable of running the internet's
domain name and number infrastructure, but one of the keys to its future
success or failure is a membership to elect the board of directors and
vote on other key decisions. ICANN signed a memorandum of understanding
with the US Department of Commerce on November 25 to start the
transition to private funding and control of the internet infrastructure
with it overseeing the whole thing. ICANN has picked a 13-member
membership advisory committee to come up with ideas for membership
schemes. For instance, ICANN might adopt a scheme whereby anybody could
join, or one where you had to have a domain name to join or even
restrict it to trade associations. ICANN put out a notice for
applications to serve on the committee and says it received expressions
of interest from more than 80 people. The committee starts work
immediately and will report at the next ICANN public meeting, scheduled
from March 2-4 in Singapore. The committee includes two ICANN board
members: George Conrades, who chairs the committee and Greg Crew. Other
members are drawn from all over the world and the committee will also
get assistance from the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at
Harvard law school, which is undertaking a study of membership issues.
Berkman professor Jonathan Zittrain will sit on the committee as a
non-voting member. http://www.icann.org
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