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Background on Newest ICANN At-Large Structures: The Internet Society Congo and the Internet Users Network (Tokyo)

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The Internet Society Congo & the Internet Users Network (Tokyo)

On 8 September 2004, two more organizations were certified as "At-Large
Structures" by ICANN's At-Large Advisory Committee: the Internet Society
Congo (based in the Democratic Republic of Congo), and the Internet Users Network
( Tokyo) (based in Japan) .

The Internet Society Congo is a non-profit association that provides support
and information on a variety of Internet-related issues to “enable users in
the Democratic Republic of Congo to achieve their objectives and to promote
the Internet in the Congo.” Internationalized domain names, and various issues
under consideration by ICANN’s At-Large Advisory Committee (ALAC) and the Country
Code Names Supporting Organization (ccNSO), will be a focus for the group.
ISOC Congo currently has approximately 200 members and conducts its business
in French. More information is available at www.alac.icann.org/africa/applications/isoc-drc.htm.

The Internet Users Network ( Tokyo), recently was established to promote
the interests of Internet end-users, and informed, meaningful user participation
in ICANN policy development. With approximately 62 initial members, the group
will focus on “forming a network of Internet users and contributing to help
solve mutual social issues, maintaining and maximizing freedom of using the
Net, and participating in global collaboration activities of Internet users.”
Internationalized domain names and Internet governance are two priority issues
for the group. More information is available at www.alac.icann.org/asia/applications/tokyo-01jun04.html.

At-Large Involvement

The purpose of “At-Large Structure” certification is to recognize that a
group meets the necessary criteria to involve individual Internet users (called
“At-Large”) at the local or issue level in ICANN activities, and that the group
will support their individual members' informed participation in ICANN efforts
that affect end-users. Organizations certified as At-Large Structures represent
a variety of individual users, and are wholly independent from ICANN. Certification
is free, easy, and done via email. For more information and an ALS application
form see www.alac.icann.org/applications/.

ICANN At- Large is a valuable and unique voice in the global Internet arena,
and the participation of additional organizations is profoundly important.
The growing involvement in ICANN of geographically and professionally diverse
user groups can help ensure that ICANN's consensus-development efforts best
reflect the interests of the global Internet community. At-Large contributes
to ICANN's work on such matters as guidance on how internationalized domain
names (use of non-ASCII characters to enable “local language” domain names)
are implemented, and how additional new top-level domains (i.e. .info, .name,
.museum, etc.) are introduced -- to name a few issues of importance to end-users.
For more information on issues addressed by At-Large, and on the 18 groups
certified as At-Large Structures thus far, see www.alac.icann.org.

At-Large Advisory Committee

The At-Large Advisory Committee was created last year to provide advice on
activities of ICANN that relate to the interests of individual Internet users,
and also to help the At-Large community throughout the world organize for structured
involvement and informed participation in ICANN. ALAC members include: Africa
-- Pierre Dandjinou, Clement Dzidonu, Sunday Folayan; Asia -- Hong Xue, Izumi
Aizu, Toshifumi Matsumoto; Latin America -- Sebastian Ricciardi, Erick Iriarte,
Tadao Takahashi; Europe -- Vittorio Bertola, Thomas Roessler, Roberto Gaetano;
and North America -- Esther Dyson, and Wendy Seltzer. Biographies of these
individuals, and information on the ALAC, can be found at www.alac.icann.org.
ALAC members can be reached at committee@alac.icann.org.

ICANN

ICANN is a non-profit organization responsible for coordinating the global
Internet's systems of unique identifiers, including the systems of domain names
and numeric addresses that are used to reach all computers on the Internet.
ICANN's mission is to ensure the stable and secure operation of these unique
identifier systems, which are vital to the Internet's operation. In addition,
ICANN coordinates policy development related to these technical functions.
For more information, see www.icann.org.