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[ga] CYBER-FEDERALIST NO.13: Staying the Course on Internet Privatization
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CYBER-FEDERALIST No. 13 31 May 2002
STAYING THE COURSE ON INTERNET PRIVATIZATION
Comments on ICANN Reform [1]
Civil Society Democracy Project (CivSoc)
Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR)
http://www.civsoc.org
The Internet Democracy Project
http://www.internetdemocracyproject.org/
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The ICANN board and staff are currently considering major changes to the
design of ICANN. These changes were first proposed in President Stuart
Lynn's February Report (the "Lynn Proposal") [2] and are being elaborated
by the ICANN Committee on Evolution and Reform [3,4,5,6].
Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility (CPSR) is the oldest
non-profit, mass membership organization working on social impacts of
computer technology. CPSR's Civil Society Democracy Project (CivSoc) has
been an active participant in Internet privatization since before the
launch of ICANN. CivSoc has offered the following comments to ICANN on reform.
* The Lynn Proposal would redefine US policy for Internet
privatization. However, such policy redefinition is outside the scope of
ICANN's authority. Modification to the terms of the 1998 Internet
privatization should be made by the US Department of Commerce (DoC), in
consultation with other parties (including other governments.)
* ICANN does exercise policy authority in DNS matters. While the
appropriate breadth of its policy-making power is an object of considerable
debate, the fact that it makes policy is no longer contested -- even by
ICANN [4]. This exercise of policy-making power creates the need for
legitimacy.
* ICANN has not fulfilled the conditions of the 1998 Internet
privatization. In particular, ICANN still lacks the required degree of
user representation on its Board. Industry control of the ICANN board has
created a legitimacy deficit.
* The main mechanism for legitimacy in ICANN has been the election of user
representatives to serve as At Large Directors. The Lynn proposal rejects
this mechanism. However, elections were successfully conducted in 2000.
Moreover, the use of elections to select At Large Directors has been
explicitly endorsed by:
o the European Commission's Christopher Wilkinson [7]
o former ICANN Chair Esther Dyson [8]
o former Swedish Prime Minister Carl Bildt [8]
o Carter Center official Charles Costello [8]
o Numerous academic studies [9, 10]
o Numerous public interest groups [11,12]
* Problems with the At Large elections may have their source more in the
opposition of the ICANN staff than from the inherent difficulties of
conducting elections. A good faith effort to hold elections again would
likely yield even better processes than in 2000.
* The keyword for the Lynn Proposal is "effectiveness." By that is meant
that ICANN should significantly reduce its emphasis on procedural
safeguards (legitimacy) and be empowered to act in a more direct and
unfettered manner. The Lynn Proposal recommends that ICANN become a more
centralized authority with reduced accountability to outside entities and
should be able to impose contracts on registries and other parties and to
call on national governments for enforcement. This call for centralized
authority with strong power of enforcement is a dramatic departure from
established Internet practices of decentralized management and voluntary
cooperation.
* The Lynn Proposal's inclusion of governments in ICANN seems as much
motivated by a need for assistance in enforcement as by a concern for the
public interest. Greater enforcement powers of ICANN policies by national
governments would be a dramatic departure from established Internet practices.
* The ICANN Committee on Evolution and Reform has introduced the term "the
ICANN community" where the previous term of reference was "the Internet
community" [6]. This manifests a significant narrowing of the vision of
input and accountability within ICANN.
* The recently announced resignations of top ICANN staff raise the specter
of a sharp drop in organizational effectiveness [13]. The combination of
staff turnover and major restructuring could introduce so much simultaneous
change into ICANN that it cannot function effectively. ICANN faces a
near-term risk of destabilization.
* The Department of Commerce faces a number of choices:
o DoC could allow ICANN to pursue it current course of redefining itself
and of redefining Internet privatization generally. That puts US
policy-making in the hands of the private groups on the ICANN board and
leaves open the risk of organizational destabilization.
o DoC could use the upcoming expiration of its ICANN agreements to revise
US policy on privatization. Revising the various the ICANN-related
agreements (be they MoUs, contracts, or procurements) would allow for an
appropriate policy-making process, i.e. a process under the authority of
the DoC. A revised Internet privatization policy might embody part or all
of the Lynn Proposal. Alternately, it might employ more market mechanisms
(as recommended by New.Net [14]) or might seek greater involvement by
international treaty organizations (as recommended by the International
Telecommunications Union [15]). In any case, the US government and not
ICANN would oversee the policy-making process.
o Alternately, the DoC could stay the course. DoC could reaffirm the terms
of the 1998 Internet privatization and require ICANN to implement that
policy. In particular, DoC could move ICANN to quickly implement At Large
elections, thereby settling a contentious issue that has consumed much of
the organization's attention. As noted above, this would be consistent
with recommendations of the European Commission's leading official in this
area and by ICANN's At Large Study Committee [7,8].
* CPSR's CivSoc recommends that last option:
o DoC should stay the course. It should work closely with ICANN to fully
implement the original 1998 Internet privatization policy. That policy
addressed the inescapable need for legitimacy in ICANN with a mechanism
that proved workable in 2000: elections. By avoiding a major
restructuring, DoC also avoids the destabilizing combination of
organizational change and staff turnover. Finally, by staying with the
original privatization policy, DoC would uphold the Internet traditions of
private, voluntary, and decentralized management.
o DoC should use all available means to gain ICANN's commitment to
implement the founding agreements of 1998.
o ICANN should cooperate with DoC in this process.
References
----------
[1] This document is available online at
http://www.cpsr.org/internetdemocracy/cyber-fed/Number_13.html
http://www.CivSoc.org
[2] Lynn, Stuart, "President's Report: ICANN - the Case for Reform," 24
February 2002. http://www.icann.org/general/lynn-reform-proposal-24feb02.htm
[3] "Interim Report of the Committee on ICANN Evolution and Reform," 29
April 2002. http://www.icann.org/committees/evol-reform/report-29apr02.htm
[4] "Working Paper on ICANN Core Mission and Values," 6 May 2002.
http://www.icann.org/committees/evol-reform/working-paper-mission-06may02.htm
[5] "Working Paper: The Policy Development Process," 7 May 2002.
http://www.icann.org/committees/evol-reform/working-paper-process-07may02.htm
[6] "Working Paper on the ICANN Structure and the Nominating Committee
Process," 9 May 2002.
http://www.icann.org/committees/evol-reform/working-paper-structure-09may02.htm
[7] Wilkinson, Christopher, "Public Policy Issues in Internet Governance,"
On the Internet, January/February 2002. [Written after the author reviewed
the Lynn Proposal; see note 4.]
http://www.isoc.org/oti/articles/1201/wilkinson.html
[8] ICANN At Large Study Committee, "Final Report on ICANN At-Large
Membership," 5 November 2001.
http://www.atlargestudy.org/final_report.shtml
[9] Klein, Hans, ed., "Global Democracy and the ICANN Elections", Special
issue of INFO-The Journal of Policy, Regulation and Strategy for
Telecommunications, Vol. 3, No. 4, August
2001. http://www.ip3.gatech.edu/publications/info.htm
Contents are:
* Wolfgang Kleinwächter, University of Aarhus (Denmark), "The Silent
Subversive: ICANN and the New Global Governance"
* Stephen D. McDowell and Philip E. Steinberg, Florida State University,
"Non-state Governance and the Internet: Civil Society and the ICANN"
* Renée Marlin-Bennett, American University, "ICANN and Democracy:
Contradictions and Possibilities"
* Jonathan Weinberg, Wayne State University, "Geeks and Greeks"
* Hans Klein, Georgia Institute of Technology, "The Feasibility of Global
Democracy: Understanding ICANN's At-large Election"
* Myungkoo Kang, Seoul National University, Beyond Underdevelopment of the
Public Sphere: Democratizing Internet Governance in Asia"
* Hans Klein, Georgia Institute of Technology, Editor's Introduction:
"Global Democracy and the ICANN Elections"
[10] Klein, Hans, "Online Social Movements and Internet Governance," Peace
Review, Vol. 13, No. 3, September 2001, 403-410.
[11] Center for Democracy and Technology and the Markle Foundation, "ICANN,
Legitimacy, and the Public Voice: Making Global Participation and
Representation Work," The NGO and Academic ICANN Study, 31 August 2001.
http://www.naisproject.org/report/final/
[12] CivSoc, "User Interest in ICANN is Broad and Deep," Cyber-Federalist
No. 12, 14 February 2002.
http://www.cpsr.org/internetdemocracy/cyber-fed/Number_12.html
[13] ICANN, "Lynn to Retire in 2003; McLaughlin to Go Half-Time," Press
Release, 27 May 2002.
http://www.icann.org/announcements/announcement-27may02.htm
[14] New.Net, "A Proposal to Introduce Market-Based Principles into Domain
Name Governance."
http://www.icann.org/icp/icp-3-background/new.net-paper-31may01.pdf
[15] Zhao, Houlin, "ITU-T and ICANN Reform," International
Telecommunications Union, 17 April 2002.
http://www.itu.int/ITU-T/tsb-director/itut-icann/index.html
=========================================================
CYBER-FEDERALIST is a series of analyses and commentaries
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Civil Society Democracy Project (CivSoc) of
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