Dow Jones
Newswires
Commerce Dept. Has 'Concerns' About VeriSign Pact
By PETER LOFTUS Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
NEW YORK -- The Department of Commerce has some "concerns" about a
proposal to extend VeriSign Inc.'s
(VRSN) monopoly on operating the central database of Internet addresses,
department spokesman Jim Dyke said.
Commerce department officials were scheduled to meet with VeriSign executives at 4 p.m. EDT Monday to
discuss the concerns.
Dyke declined to elaborate on the department's concerns, but said no
final decision would be made Monday.
"This meeting is not to notify them that they are receiving final
approval," Dyke said. "We're just discussing the concerns we have."
The Commerce Department is considering an agreement VeriSign reached last month with the Internet
Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, or ICANN, a non-profit
organization charged by the federal government with overseeing the
allocation of Internet domain names.
Under the agreement, VeriSign would
exclusively operate the central database of names ending in .com through
2007 without having to divest itself of either its wholesale or retail
address businesses. In exchange, VeriSign would give up control of .org addresses
in 2002 and open the .net domain to competition in 2006.
That proposal would modify a 1999 agreement that requires VeriSign to divest itself of the wholesale or
retail unit in order to retain control of the databases for .com, .net and
.org through 2007.
Under the original agreement, VeriSign had until May 10 to sell or spin off one
of the units. The Commerce Department last month extended the deadline to
May 31 to give it time to consider the VeriSign-ICANN proposal.
VeriSign has indicated it would sell
its retail address unit, Network Solutions, if it fails to gain Commerce
Department approval of the latest proposal.
-By Peter Loftus, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-5267; peter.loftus@dowjones.com |