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[ga] New gTLD Draft Applicant Guidebook Update
- To: "ga@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <ga@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: [ga] New gTLD Draft Applicant Guidebook Update
- From: Glen de Saint Géry <Glen@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 11 Jan 2009 07:14:30 -0800
[To: council[at]gnso.icann.org; liaison6c[at]gnso.icann.org]
[To: ga[at]gnso.icann.org; announce[at]gnso.icann.org]
[To: regional-liaisons[at]icann.org]
http://www.icann.org/en/announcements/announcement-3-09jan09-en.htm
New gTLD Draft Applicant Guidebook Update
9 January 2009
The first public comment period on the Draft Applicant Guidebook for new gTLDs
has closed. The period opened on 24 October 2008, and was 76 days long after it
closed 7 January to account for later publication of the Guidebook in Arabic,
Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish. ICANN continued to receive and accept
English comments received until the January 7 deadline considering the end of
year holidays.
The comment period received over 300 comments from participants from 24
different countries. Among the many participants were individuals and
organizations representing intellectual property interests, brand owners,
business owners, ICANN supporting organizations, domain name industry players,
and governments.
"This level of interest and feedback to the Draft Guidebook shows that the
comment process is working. All the comments and concerns will be considered
and a response will be provided" said Paul Levins, Executive Officer and Vice
President Corporate Affairs.
Some of the key concerns raised by the community that are immediately obvious
are:
Brand protection issues and the impact on brands and trademark owners
Financial considerations, including evaluation fees, ongoing registry fees, and
refund procedures
Various issues surrounding the proposed registry agreement, particularly, price
controls, registry/registrar separation, the management of future agreement
amendments, equitable treatment, and others
General comments and concerns related to expanding the top level and its impact
on the global marketplace, specific industries and Domain Name System
stability.
"There is no doubt that we need to address these and other legitimate concerns
before proceeding to open the application process" said Mr Levins.
Respondents had the option to comment on the Guidebook as a whole or on one of
its six modules. Just over half (55 percent), chose to comment on the
Guidebook; the rest commented on specific modules or topics. The fifth module,
covering the base agreement between new registries and ICANN, received the most
comments (around 30 percent).
The responses are now being summarized and evaluated. A comprehensive analysis
of the comments will be released in early February.
"We will also be holding conferences in different global locations to further
explain the Guidebook, the changes envisaged and to have further dialogue.
Alongside the feedback received from these and other outreach events, the
summary and analysis will inform ICANN staff through the next program
development phase, which will mean amending the current guidebook" Mr Levins
said.
"I'd like to take this opportunity to thank all those that contributed their
responses to the first public comment period. ICANN looks forward to continuing
a productive dialogue on this that will result in amendments to the application
process" Levins said.
New gTLDs and the Internet
Openness Change Innovation
After years of discussion and thought, generic top-level domains (gTLDs) are
being expanded. They will allow for more innovation, choice and change to a
global Internet presently served by just 21 generic top-level domain names.
A draft Applicant Guidebook has been developed with opportunities for public
comment. The draft Guidebook describes processes for objections to
applications. There has been detailed technical scrutiny to ensure the
Internet's stability and security. There will be an evaluation fee, but it will
recover costs only (expenses so far, application processing and other costs)
and it will be reviewed after the first round of applications. ICANN is a not
for profit corporation dedicated to coordinating the Internet's addressing
system. If fee collection exceeds expenses, the community will be consulted as
to how that excess is to be used.
Promoting competition and choice is one of the principles upon which ICANN was
founded. In a world with 1.5 billion Internet users (and growing), diversity,
choice and innovation are key. The Internet has supported huge increases in
choice, innovation and the competition of ideas and expanding new gTLDs is an
opportunity for more.
Glen de Saint Géry
GNSO Secretariat
gnso.secretariat@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
http://gnso.icann.org
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