----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, May 27, 2001 12:41
PM
Subject: [ga-icann] On being
technology or consumer driven
Great cartoon
in the Parade (a U.S. Sunday Supplement pub) magazine today.
Two
little kids are staring at a refrigerator with various drawings on the
door,
and down below it says (to the effect -- I don't have it in
front of me), "Sure
wish we had the money so we could really
communicate things." I have used
Veronica and the grandchildren's
refrigerator art as issues in Federal Court
with some modicum of
success (my client got his domain name back). In
ICANN, whether in the
GA or anywhere else, people with those concerns
have no voice
whatever. And here is what I think is the reason:
Many of the high tech business involved folks here will recognize the
distinction
between the technology and the consumer driven
company. The former is the
birthplace of vapor ware, the whizzy
computer named after the girl friend that
out in the market drops a
terrible bomb, the electronic wizard who comes up
with the ultra
technology, forms a company, and then the company heads for the
bottom
of the pile until the Board replaces the inventor-techie CEO with
someone who knows how to run a business, and so on. The automobile
industry exemplifies the latter -- whatever the consumer wants.
The whole
business plan is run on marketing surveys, and good and
progressive new
technology that would really benefit the consumer if
used never sees the
market place because the consumer has not actually
asked for any of it.
So what it boils down to is that the public I'm talking about wants a
consumer
driven internet, while ICANN is technology driven. It
does not, and likely
never will, understand the function of a public
interest organization with respect
to the needs of the little guy. It
performs an extremely essential service in what
it does with regard to
roots, cc TLDs, etc., but those are not the things that the
little guy
knows or cares about. The effect is that, whether or not with malice
aforethought, ICANN has become a service organization to NSI/Verisign
and
the general public has been murdered. (Someone with more time than
I have
should run a comparison between what the Articles of
Incorporation say that
ICANN should be doing and the "research
contract" that NSI/Verisign is now
touting to see how they match up.)
So my conclusion is that I will battle with every bone I have to ensure
the
continued functioning and good fortune of ICANN -- what it does
could
not be done by any other kind of organization. The quibble I
have is that
is should stop pretending to be something that it is not.
At the same time, I think that ICANN cannot do the things that
we've
been talking about lately that in fact are oriented
towards the "consumer,"
and will never be able to, hence
something else is needed. Marilyn Cade
and others are discussing
such needs, and something may come of that
yet. "Live in hope
and die in dispair," they say, but I don't think so.
Bill Lovell