Five Questions with David Hernand New.net CEO weighs in on the tussle between his company and ICANN over who controls the expansion of the Internet. Since early 2001, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Numbers and Names (ICANN) has had a major thorn in its side. That thorn, domain name registry New.net, has circumvented ICANN’s process for naming new domain suffixes to expand the Internet beyond the .com, .net and .org domains that have been used to date. New.net has gone directly to Internet service providers (ISPs) and made deals to allow users to access new domains that New.net sells, and has drawn a heap of controversy its way by doing so. Business 2.0 Online visits with New.net CEO David Hernand to get his take on the debate surrounding the expansion of Internet domains. http://www.business2.com/articles/web/0,,16182,FF.html AT-LARGE COMMITTEE RELEASES DISCUSSION DOCUMENT The ICANN committee studying at-large membership has released its first set of initial conclusions in a discussion document. The document notes the importance of the board in the decision making process and starts with the premise that individuals need a voice in ICANN. http://www.atlargestudy.org/DiscussionDraftRev.5.4.htm The row over who runs the internet is hotting up. This week the net's ruling body re-asserted its existing policy for managing and creating domain names on the world wide web. It issued a stark warning to those organisations offering alternative domain names that sit outside the net's centrally organised name system. But critics have questioned the policy statement and say the net's administrators should consult more widely before handing down judgement. http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_1437000/1437377.stmReceived on Mon Jul 16 2001 - 07:52:51 UTC
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