Dow Jones
Newswires
Commerce Dept: 'Confident' VeriSign Pact Can Be Reached
Dow Jones Newswires By Peter Loftus
Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
NEW YORK -- The Department of Commerce said Monday it's confident it
will reach an agreement with VeriSign
Inc. (VRSN) that would extend VeriSign's monopoly on operating the central
database of most Internet addresses.
Commerce officials met with VeriSign
executives Monday evening and provided feedback on VeriSign's April
agreement with the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, or
Icann, the non-profit organization charged by the federal government with
overseeing the allocation of Web addresses.
"We have communicated our general thinking (to VeriSign), are pleased with the progress, and are
confident an agreement can be reached in the near-term," the department's
general counsel, Ted Kassinger, said in a prepared statement after the
meeting.
Before the meeting, a Commerce department spokesman said the department
had "concerns" about the proposed VeriSign-Icann agreement, but declined
to elaborate.
VeriSign spokesman Brian
O'Shaughnessy said none of the issues under discussion affect the "core
terms" of the proposed VeriSign-Icann agreement.
"VeriSign and Icann are truly in
lock-step, and are extremely confident we'll get a favorable ruling," he
said.
Neither the Commerce Department nor VeriSign would disclose the issues that VeriSign must address in order to secure
Commerce's approval.
O'Shaughnessy, the VeriSign
spokesman, said any modifications to the proposed agreement with Icann
would be "minor."
Under the proposed VeriSign-Icann agreement, VeriSign would exclusively operate the central
database, or registry, of Internet addresses ending in .com through 2007.
It would give up control of .org addresses in 2002 and open the .net
domain to competition in 2006.
A key provision of the proposal is that VeriSign wouldn't have to divest itself of either
its registry unit or retail address unit, Network Solutions. That modifies
a 1999 agreement with Icann, which required VeriSign to make such a divestiture in order to
keep control of all three domain names through 2007.
Under the 1999 agreement, VeriSign
had until May 10 to sell or spin off either its registry or Network
Solutions. Last month, the Commerce department extended the deadline to
May 31 to give it time to consider the proposal. VeriSign has indicated it would shed the Network
Solutions unit if the Commerce Department rejected the proposal.
VeriSign collects $6 annually for
each address in its registry, no matter which company sells the name at
the retail level.
-By Peter Loftus, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-5267;
peter.loftus@dowjones.com
Officials from the Commerce Department and VeriSign continued to negotiate Monday evening, a
person familiar with the matter said.
One outstanding issue is that Commerce wants to specify the precise
date by which VeriSign would divest
itself of the database for Web addresses ending in .org, this person said.
So far, VeriSign has publicly said it
would give up its lock on that domain sometime in 2002.
Commerce also wants to specify the date in 2006 when the database for
.net addresses would be re-opened to competition, the person said.
-By Peter Loftus, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-5267; peter.loftus@dowjones.com |