The following text is copyright 1998 by
Network World, permission is hearby given for reproduction, as long as
attribution is given and this notice is included.
This story appeared on Network World Fusion at http://www.nwfusion.com/archive/1998b/1214bradner.html
A glass seven-eighths full
By Scott Bradner
Network World, 12/14/98
Fellow Network World columnist Mark Gibbs
knows what he is talking about most of the time, but that's not the case in his
column on the ICANN (NW, Nov. 30, page 68).
Gibbs wrote that the Internet Corporation
for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) plan appears to make "almost no one
happy." I may be biased because I've been involved with the Internet
naming system issue for the past two years or so, but my view of the ICANN is
rather different from Gibbs'.
As Gibbs reported, the ICANN is a private
nonprofit corporation that has been created to privatize the functions of the
Internet Assigned Number Authority. Jon Postel managed the latter organization
until his recent death.
The ICANN, in its current form, is the
result of negotiations between Postel, Network Solutions and the U.S.
government. Like most products of extensive negotiation, the purity of the
ICANN's design can be hard to find. But the new organization is basically true
to Postel's vision of having the Internet's infrastructure managed, at least in
part, by technical experts.
Discussions about exactly what shape the
ICANN would take have involved three groups of people. There are those people,
mainly from the technical and ISP communities, who are in strong agreement with
what Postel was trying to accomplish. There is a group of people who support
Postel's basic ideas but have had issues with some implementation details. And
there are those who do not like the basic ICANN concept itself. Many
commentators seem to confuse the views of the last two groups.
The best way to summarize the difference
between my view on the ICANN and Gibbs' is to look at the transcript from the
mid-November ICANN meeting that Gibbs mentions in his column. I was among the
200 people of varied backgrounds who attended that meeting. Attendees included
representatives of the three groups mentioned above as well as quite a few
people who just wanted to see what was happening.
Mark Luker of Educause, a nonprofit
association of 1,600 colleges and universities, elicited the most applause at
the meeting when he said: "Our members believe that the present board, the
interim board and the bylaws are an excellent start. We would urge that we get
on with this business."
Whereas I prefer to recall the applause,
my fellow columnist prefers to focus on the repeated complaints of a small
minority.
Even though the board made changes to the
ICANN bylaws to address many concerns expressed by attendees worried about
specific implementation details, I would not claim that the ICANN is perfect.
It is a glass seven-eighths full.
It's unfortunate that Gibbs aligns himself
with those who see the glass as empty because they disagree with the basic
concept of an Internet run for the benefit of the community rather than for
just a few.
Disclaimer: Some Harvard people were
involved in the ICANN meeting. In spite of that, the above is my opinion.