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ICANN chief open to change in U.S. oversight

June 29, 2009 02:46 AM ET

Computerworld Australia - The new Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) chief has poured cold water on claims the organization is resisting a break from alleged U.S oversight.

Incoming CEO Rod Beckstrom said at the Sydney ICANN meeting that he doesn't have a "fixed form opinion" but is confident that an "optimistic" resolution will be passed.

The comments follow a call last month by European Union society commissioner Viviane Reding for President Barack Obama to break the country's ties with ICANN. The group has operated under a Joint Project Agreement (JPA)/Memorandum of Understanding since its formation in 1998 with the U.S. Department of Commerce and has continued to renew the deal.

Reding and others argue the JPA provides the U.S. with oversight of ICANN and have appealed for the deal to be dropped when it expires Sept. 30.

ICANN board chairman Peter Dengate Thrush, also Beckstrom's "boss", told Computerworld Reding's call for the creation of a group of 12 nations to oversee the group will be ineffective.

"What we would see is an eventual replication of the existing ICANN structure," Thrush said.

"People will see these country heads as figures of power and will want to move closer to them... the organisational structural will then be mirrored under the G12.

"The JPA makes no difference to oversight... we need accountabilty from the community, ISPs and the media, not from some outside aloof business or governments."

The desire to end the JPA is not exclusive to European registrars, Thrush said, but he would not confirm whether the deal will be renewed.

Other regional Internet registries have argued the Governmental Advisory Committee (GAC), which operates as a forum for government and consumer interests and concerns, should be given greater power.

While ICANN has become more transparent to its constituencies since the introduction of an independent decision arbitrator and group ombudsman, Thrush conceded accountability in the organization "is not good enough" and will be improved.

The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority, which coordinates the DNS Root, and Internet Protocol addresses, will remain under contract with the U.S. government irrespective of the outcome of the JPA, and is up for review in 2011.

Beckstrom said his experience in coordinating conflicting government agencies and directing the high-profile CEO Peace Network has provided him with valuable insight into organizational structures. Last year, he headed the U.S. National Cybersecurity Center in the Department of Homeland Security, where he spearheaded cooperation between the attorney general and a number of government defence organizations created in the wake of the Sept. 11 attacks. He also served on the senior advisory group for the director of National Intelligence.

The decentralization of ICANN is "like nothing else in history," Beckstrom said, adding he is well-suited to the CEO job given his experience in the decentralized Peace Network.

Beckstrom also serves on the Environmental Defense Fund board and the Jamii Bora Trust.


Reprinted with permission from

Computerworld AustraliaFor more news from Computerworld Australia, visit its Web site. Story copyright 2006 Computerworld New Australia. All rights reserved.

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The new Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) chief has poured cold water on claims the organization is resisting a break from alleged U.S. oversight.

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