New ICAN CTO Report on the IETF
HI All, Thanks to Olivier and Greg for all their hard work on the IETF MOU that they put in. I want to call everyone's attention to the new publication that David Huberman put out on ICANN's relationship with the IETF. I think it was a good paper. https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/octo-043-16apr26-en.pdf He provides a good overview of why ICANN works hard to keep up their close partnership with the IETF. In the paper he describes a relationship that is not only formal and practical, but also reciprocal. As we all know, the Internet’s unique identifier system is defined by IETF standards, and IETF participants bring technical expertise into ICANN's multistakeholder governance processes. Since 2025, IETF working groups advanced efforts that have direct implications for how the Domain Name System (DNS) operates, from how DNS delegations work, to how domain names are provisioned, to how the cryptographic algorithms that secure the DNS are managed. This report also focuses on and offers a practical overview of what changed, what's coming, and why it matters to registry operator, registrar, DNS operator, or anyone who depends on the protocols that make the domain name ecosystem function, All in all I thought it was a good paper. The technical foundations on which the security, stability, and resilience of the Internet’s unique identifier system depend on are constantly evolving, and it is important to keep abreast of all these issues and why all constituencies within ICANN should stay abreast and work closely with the IETF as At Large has done in the past Best, Judith -- _________________________________________________________________________ Judith Hellerstein, Founder & CEO Hellerstein & Associates 3001 Veazey Terrace NW, Washington DC 20008 Phone: (202) 362-5139 Skype ID: judithhellerstein Mobile/Whats app: +1202-333-6517 E-mail:Judith@jhellerstein.com Website:www.jhellerstein.com Linked In:www.linkedin.com/in/jhellerstein/ Opening Telecom & Technology Opportunities Worldwide
Thank you Judith or sharing and for your insights Hadia On Tue, 21 Apr 2026 at 21:58, Judith Hellerstein via ALAC <alac@icann.org> wrote:
HI All,
Thanks to Olivier and Greg for all their hard work on the IETF MOU that they put in. I want to call everyone's attention to the new publication that David Huberman put out on ICANN's relationship with the IETF. I think it was a good paper. https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/octo-043-16apr26-en.pdf
He provides a good overview of why ICANN works hard to keep up their close partnership with the IETF. In the paper he describes a relationship that is not only formal and practical, but also reciprocal. As we all know, the Internet’s unique identifier system is defined by IETF standards, and IETF participants bring technical expertise into ICANN's multistakeholder governance processes.
Since 2025, IETF working groups advanced efforts that have direct implications for how the Domain Name System (DNS) operates, from how DNS delegations work, to how domain names are provisioned, to how the cryptographic algorithms that secure the DNS are managed. This report also focuses on and offers a practical overview of what changed, what's coming, and why it matters to registry operator, registrar, DNS operator, or anyone who depends on the protocols that make the domain name ecosystem function, All in all I thought it was a good paper. The technical foundations on which the security, stability, and resilience of the Internet’s unique identifier system depend on are constantly evolving, and it is important to keep abreast of all these issues and why all constituencies within ICANN should stay abreast and work closely with the IETF as At Large has done in the past
Best,
Judith
-- _________________________________________________________________________ Judith Hellerstein, Founder & CEO Hellerstein & Associates 3001 Veazey Terrace NW, Washington DC 20008 Phone: (202) 362-5139 Skype ID: judithhellerstein Mobile/Whats app: +1202-333-6517 E-mail: Judith@jhellerstein.com Website: www.jhellerstein.com Linked In: www.linkedin.com/in/jhellerstein/ Opening Telecom & Technology Opportunities Worldwide
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On Tue, Apr 21, 2026 at 3:59 PM Judith Hellerstein via NA-Discuss < na-discuss@icann.org> wrote:
As we all know, the Internet’s unique identifier system is defined by IETF standards, and IETF participants bring technical expertise into ICANN's multistakeholder governance processes.
IETF meetings also have a very diverse audience involving corporate, government, academic and public participation. They just don't call it "multistakeholder" because the model isn't heavily silo'd or bureaucratic; a triumph of meritocracy over money or politics (usually). Beyond pure technical expertise, ICANN has much to learn from IETF's approach to governance -- especially with regards to public participation -- on Internet matters including but well beyond just identifiers. And it does all this with an annual budget one-eleventh that of ICANN's, so it is not financially dependent on the technologies it defines or maintains. Plus ... there is much to recommend in decision-making by humming. - Evan
"IETF meetings also have a very diverse audience involving corporate, government, academic and public participation. They just don't call it "multistakeholder" because the model isn't heavily silo'd or bureaucratic; a triumph of meritocracy over money or politics (usually)." Agreed. On Wed, Apr 22, 2026 at 3:14 PM Evan Leibovitch via NA-Discuss < na-discuss@icann.org> wrote:
On Tue, Apr 21, 2026 at 3:59 PM Judith Hellerstein via NA-Discuss < na-discuss@icann.org> wrote:
As we all know, the Internet’s unique identifier system is defined by IETF standards, and IETF participants bring technical expertise into ICANN's multistakeholder governance processes.
IETF meetings also have a very diverse audience involving corporate, government, academic and public participation. They just don't call it "multistakeholder" because the model isn't heavily silo'd or bureaucratic; a triumph of meritocracy over money or politics (usually).
Beyond pure technical expertise, ICANN has much to learn from IETF's approach to governance -- especially with regards to public participation -- on Internet matters including but well beyond just identifiers. And it does all this with an annual budget one-eleventh that of ICANN's, so it is not financially dependent on the technologies it defines or maintains.
Plus ... there is much to recommend in decision-making by humming.
- Evan
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Visit the NARALO online at http://www.naralo.org ------ _______________________________________________ By submitting your personal data, you consent to the processing of your personal data for purposes of subscribing to this mailing list accordance with the ICANN Privacy Policy (https://www.icann.org/privacy/policy) and the website Terms of Service (https://www.icann.org/privacy/tos). You can visit the Mailman link above to change your membership status or configuration, including unsubscribing, setting digest-style delivery or disabling delivery altogether (e.g., for a vacation), and so on.
Many thanks for the useful report Judith. Best Regards On Thu, Apr 23, 2026 at 1:23 AM David Mackey via ALAC <alac@icann.org> wrote:
"IETF meetings also have a very diverse audience involving corporate, government, academic and public participation. They just don't call it "multistakeholder" because the model isn't heavily silo'd or bureaucratic; a triumph of meritocracy over money or politics (usually)."
Agreed.
On Wed, Apr 22, 2026 at 3:14 PM Evan Leibovitch via NA-Discuss < na-discuss@icann.org> wrote:
On Tue, Apr 21, 2026 at 3:59 PM Judith Hellerstein via NA-Discuss < na-discuss@icann.org> wrote:
As we all know, the Internet’s unique identifier system is defined by IETF standards, and IETF participants bring technical expertise into ICANN's multistakeholder governance processes.
IETF meetings also have a very diverse audience involving corporate, government, academic and public participation. They just don't call it "multistakeholder" because the model isn't heavily silo'd or bureaucratic; a triumph of meritocracy over money or politics (usually).
Beyond pure technical expertise, ICANN has much to learn from IETF's approach to governance -- especially with regards to public participation -- on Internet matters including but well beyond just identifiers. And it does all this with an annual budget one-eleventh that of ICANN's, so it is not financially dependent on the technologies it defines or maintains.
Plus ... there is much to recommend in decision-making by humming.
- Evan
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Visit the NARALO online at http://www.naralo.org ------ _______________________________________________ By submitting your personal data, you consent to the processing of your personal data for purposes of subscribing to this mailing list accordance with the ICANN Privacy Policy (https://www.icann.org/privacy/policy) and the website Terms of Service (https://www.icann.org/privacy/tos). You can visit the Mailman link above to change your membership status or configuration, including unsubscribing, setting digest-style delivery or disabling delivery altogether (e.g., for a vacation), and so on.
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-- Barrack O. Otieno +254721325277 +254733206359 Skype: barrack.otieno PGP ID: 0x2611D86A
Dear Judith, thanks for pointing us to this excellent and very helpful paper from OCTO. This "taking stock" was very interesting as I was not aware at all about the extensive collaboration on so many IETF working groups and I am thrilled to see such collaboration happening at all levels. Part 1 of this paper also has a link to https://pti.icann.org/agreements , a web page on the special PTI Web site which shows the extent to which the relationship between ICANN, PTI, the IANA functions and the IETF are codified as well as monitored, followed and analysed thanks to a set of Agreements that are regularly reviewed, amended and updated. You can see all of the original documents which the IANA Stewardship Group, some drafted with the help of law firm Sidley Austin and will notice that there are a number of MoUs that make sure that the matter of PTI and PTI operations is not just dropped, since it is a very important function indeed. Part 2 of this paper explains the various "protocol development in IETF working groups in 2025 that may be important to those interested in the ICANN ecosystem." Both parts, in my opinion, fall somehow short of achieving their goals as both are missing out on some important information, which I would like to raise here: In Part 1 - the OCTO paper confirms the point that I have been making for nearly two years: whilst the relationship between ICANN, PTI and "its clients" is adequately monitored, tracked, reviewed and enforced through a multitude of Agreements shown in the above page, there is absolutely no mention of the IANA IPR and the IANA IPR Agreements dated 30 September 2016. - There is no tracking of it. - There is no formal governance process or oversight in ICANN for monitoring, identifying and addressing issues relating to these IPRs - There is no community consultation - There no service level expectations - There is no enforcement It is a complete barren landscape - and this is one of the main reasons why the transfer of IANA IPR from the IETF Trust to the IETF IPMC and other important related issues have taken so much time: a complete lack of process in ICANN leading to confusion, in addition to potential breaches of the IANA IPR Agremeents dated 30 September 2016. In addition to this, there appears to have been continued opposition from ICANN Legal to seeking independent legal advice in relation to the IANA IPR Agreements dated 30 September 2016, including but not restricted to in respect of the Issues raised in relation to and arising from the IANA IPR transfer, the IANA IPR processes, the IANA IPR Agreements and any new IANA IPR Agreements, as well as the suitability or unsuitability of the use of Novation Agreements given all of the other issues cited. My submission recommends independent investigation, engagement of specialist Counsel (Sidley or Californian Counsel) to prepare an independent legal opinion, full community transparency, and the adoption of interim protective measures pending the negotiation of replacement instruments that genuinely address the governance failures identified. Is ICANN ready to remedy this failure? In Part 2 - the OCTO paper focusses solely on *protocol development* in IETF working groups. This somehow provides an incomplete picture of the extent by which ICANN has links with the IETF, although I do not know whether there is a specific reason for focussing solely on protocol development. First, there is the excellent work of the IETF Liaison who does more than just follow these working groups. The IETF is regularly informed of ICANN Activity through the IETF Liaison and their report to the IETF Administration LLC Board and at IETF meetings which goes way further than just focussing on matters directly concerning the IETF. Second, there are other IETF groups that have done work on topics of interest both to ICANN and the IETF - for example the IDNA and IDNAbis working groups that laid the groundwork for IDNs. RFCs: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc4690/ in Sept 2006 https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc5891/ in Aug 2010 ICANN has since done a significant amount of work in relation to IDNs, especially when it comes to the operation of IDNs, including Label Generation Rules for various scripts. Is there a link back to the IETF for these? Should there be? Should the ICANN work be codified/recorded as IETF RFCs? Or perhaps those in charge at ICANN see the IETF as only focussing on Protocols and implementation is not something that should be addressed at the IETF? I wonder if we could ask these questions to OCTO? Kindest regards, Olivier On 21/04/2026 20:26, Judith Hellerstein via ALAC wrote:
HI All,
Thanks to Olivier and Greg for all their hard work on the IETF MOU that they put in. I want to call everyone's attention to the new publication that David Huberman put out on ICANN's relationship with the IETF. I think it was a good paper. https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/octo-043-16apr26-en.pdf
He provides a good overview of why ICANN works hard to keep up their close partnership with the IETF. In the paper he describes a relationship that is not only formal and practical, but also reciprocal. As we all know, the Internet’s unique identifier system is defined by IETF standards, and IETF participants bring technical expertise into ICANN's multistakeholder governance processes.
Since 2025, IETF working groups advanced efforts that have direct implications for how the Domain Name System (DNS) operates, from how DNS delegations work, to how domain names are provisioned, to how the cryptographic algorithms that secure the DNS are managed. This report also focuses on and offers a practical overview of what changed, what's coming, and why it matters to registry operator, registrar, DNS operator, or anyone who depends on the protocols that make the domain name ecosystem function, All in all I thought it was a good paper. The technical foundations on which the security, stability, and resilience of the Internet’s unique identifier system depend on are constantly evolving, and it is important to keep abreast of all these issues and why all constituencies within ICANN should stay abreast and work closely with the IETF as At Large has done in the past
Best,
Judith
-- _________________________________________________________________________ Judith Hellerstein, Founder & CEO Hellerstein & Associates 3001 Veazey Terrace NW, Washington DC 20008 Phone: (202) 362-5139 Skype ID: judithhellerstein Mobile/Whats app: +1202-333-6517 E-mail:Judith@jhellerstein.com Website:www.jhellerstein.com Linked In:www.linkedin.com/in/jhellerstein/ Opening Telecom & Technology Opportunities Worldwide
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Hi Olivier: For the record - and grist for the mill - see attached, two Sidley Austin memos to the CCWG: 1. Internal accountability/Hybrid models of April 2015 2. Regarding IANA Intellectual Property Rights of August 2015 Carlton ============================== *Carlton A Samuels* *Mobile: 876-818-1799Strategy, Process, Governance, Assessment & Turnaround* ============================= On Sun, 26 Apr 2026 at 11:41, Olivier MJ Crépin-Leblond via ALAC < alac@icann.org> wrote:
Dear Judith,
thanks for pointing us to this excellent and very helpful paper from OCTO. This "taking stock" was very interesting as I was not aware at all about the extensive collaboration on so many IETF working groups and I am thrilled to see such collaboration happening at all levels.
Part 1 of this paper also has a link to https://pti.icann.org/agreements , a web page on the special PTI Web site which shows the extent to which the relationship between ICANN, PTI, the IANA functions and the IETF are codified as well as monitored, followed and analysed thanks to a set of Agreements that are regularly reviewed, amended and updated. You can see all of the original documents which the IANA Stewardship Group, some drafted with the help of law firm Sidley Austin and will notice that there are a number of MoUs that make sure that the matter of PTI and PTI operations is not just dropped, since it is a very important function indeed.
Part 2 of this paper explains the various "protocol development in IETF working groups in 2025 that may be important to those interested in the ICANN ecosystem."
Both parts, in my opinion, fall somehow short of achieving their goals as both are missing out on some important information, which I would like to raise here:
In Part 1 - the OCTO paper confirms the point that I have been making for nearly two years: whilst the relationship between ICANN, PTI and "its clients" is adequately monitored, tracked, reviewed and enforced through a multitude of Agreements shown in the above page, there is absolutely no mention of the IANA IPR and the IANA IPR Agreements dated 30 September 2016. - There is no tracking of it. - There is no formal governance process or oversight in ICANN for monitoring, identifying and addressing issues relating to these IPRs - There is no community consultation - There no service level expectations - There is no enforcement
It is a complete barren landscape - and this is one of the main reasons why the transfer of IANA IPR from the IETF Trust to the IETF IPMC and other important related issues have taken so much time: a complete lack of process in ICANN leading to confusion, in addition to potential breaches of the IANA IPR Agremeents dated 30 September 2016.
In addition to this, there appears to have been continued opposition from ICANN Legal to seeking independent legal advice in relation to the IANA IPR Agreements dated 30 September 2016, including but not restricted to in respect of the Issues raised in relation to and arising from the IANA IPR transfer, the IANA IPR processes, the IANA IPR Agreements and any new IANA IPR Agreements, as well as the suitability or unsuitability of the use of Novation Agreements given all of the other issues cited.
My submission recommends independent investigation, engagement of specialist Counsel (Sidley or Californian Counsel) to prepare an independent legal opinion, full community transparency, and the adoption of interim protective measures pending the negotiation of replacement instruments that genuinely address the governance failures identified.
Is ICANN ready to remedy this failure?
In Part 2 - the OCTO paper focusses solely on *protocol development* in IETF working groups. This somehow provides an incomplete picture of the extent by which ICANN has links with the IETF, although I do not know whether there is a specific reason for focussing solely on protocol development.
First, there is the excellent work of the IETF Liaison who does more than just follow these working groups. The IETF is regularly informed of ICANN Activity through the IETF Liaison and their report to the IETF Administration LLC Board and at IETF meetings which goes way further than just focussing on matters directly concerning the IETF.
Second, there are other IETF groups that have done work on topics of interest both to ICANN and the IETF - for example the IDNA and IDNAbis working groups that laid the groundwork for IDNs.
RFCs: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc4690/ in Sept 2006 https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc5891/ in Aug 2010
ICANN has since done a significant amount of work in relation to IDNs, especially when it comes to the operation of IDNs, including Label Generation Rules for various scripts. Is there a link back to the IETF for these? Should there be? Should the ICANN work be codified/recorded as IETF RFCs?
Or perhaps those in charge at ICANN see the IETF as only focussing on Protocols and implementation is not something that should be addressed at the IETF? I wonder if we could ask these questions to OCTO?
Kindest regards,
Olivier
On 21/04/2026 20:26, Judith Hellerstein via ALAC wrote:
HI All,
Thanks to Olivier and Greg for all their hard work on the IETF MOU that they put in. I want to call everyone's attention to the new publication that David Huberman put out on ICANN's relationship with the IETF. I think it was a good paper. https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/octo-043-16apr26-en.pdf
He provides a good overview of why ICANN works hard to keep up their close partnership with the IETF. In the paper he describes a relationship that is not only formal and practical, but also reciprocal. As we all know, the Internet’s unique identifier system is defined by IETF standards, and IETF participants bring technical expertise into ICANN's multistakeholder governance processes.
Since 2025, IETF working groups advanced efforts that have direct implications for how the Domain Name System (DNS) operates, from how DNS delegations work, to how domain names are provisioned, to how the cryptographic algorithms that secure the DNS are managed. This report also focuses on and offers a practical overview of what changed, what's coming, and why it matters to registry operator, registrar, DNS operator, or anyone who depends on the protocols that make the domain name ecosystem function, All in all I thought it was a good paper. The technical foundations on which the security, stability, and resilience of the Internet’s unique identifier system depend on are constantly evolving, and it is important to keep abreast of all these issues and why all constituencies within ICANN should stay abreast and work closely with the IETF as At Large has done in the past
Best,
Judith
-- _________________________________________________________________________ Judith Hellerstein, Founder & CEO Hellerstein & Associates 3001 Veazey Terrace NW, Washington DC 20008 Phone: (202) 362-5139 Skype ID: judithhellerstein Mobile/Whats app: +1202-333-6517 E-mail: Judith@jhellerstein.com Website: www.jhellerstein.com Linked In: www.linkedin.com/in/jhellerstein/ Opening Telecom & Technology Opportunities Worldwide
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At-Large Online: http://www.atlarge.icann.org ALAC Working Wiki: https://community.icann.org/display/atlarge/At-Large+Advisory+Committee+(ALA...) _______________________________________________ By submitting your personal data, you consent to the processing of your personal data for purposes of subscribing to this mailing list accordance with the ICANN Privacy Policy (https://www.icann.org/privacy/policy) and the website Terms of Service (https://www.icann.org/privacy/tos). You can visit the Mailman link above to change your membership status or configuration, including unsubscribing, setting digest-style delivery or disabling delivery altogether (e.g., for a vacation), and so on.
Dear Carlton, many thanks for your follow-up. I refer you to my document "IANA Intellectual Property: CCG Failures, Governance Breakdown, Issues and Recommendations" dated 15 April 2026 (attached, with ZIPs) that I copied to the CPWG and which indeed takes the two Sidley Austin memos into account. I look forward to your further feedback. Kindest regards, Olivier On 27/04/2026 02:00, Carlton Samuels wrote:
Hi Olivier: For the record - and grist for the mill - see attached, two Sidley Austin memos to the CCWG:
1. Internal accountability/Hybrid models of April 2015 2. Regarding IANA Intellectual Property Rights of August 2015
Carlton
============================== /Carlton A Samuels/ /Mobile: 876-818-1799 Strategy, Process, Governance, Assessment & Turnaround/ =============================
On Sun, 26 Apr 2026 at 11:41, Olivier MJ Crépin-Leblond via ALAC <alac@icann.org> wrote:
Dear Judith,
thanks for pointing us to this excellent and very helpful paper from OCTO. This "taking stock" was very interesting as I was not aware at all about the extensive collaboration on so many IETF working groups and I am thrilled to see such collaboration happening at all levels.
Part 1 of this paper also has a link to https://pti.icann.org/agreements , a web page on the special PTI Web site which shows the extent to which the relationship between ICANN, PTI, the IANA functions and the IETF are codified as well as monitored, followed and analysed thanks to a set of Agreements that are regularly reviewed, amended and updated. You can see all of the original documents which the IANA Stewardship Group, some drafted with the help of law firm Sidley Austin and will notice that there are a number of MoUs that make sure that the matter of PTI and PTI operations is not just dropped, since it is a very important function indeed.
Part 2 of this paper explains the various "protocol development in IETF working groups in 2025 that may be important to those interested in the ICANN ecosystem."
Both parts, in my opinion, fall somehow short of achieving their goals as both are missing out on some important information, which I would like to raise here:
In Part 1 - the OCTO paper confirms the point that I have been making for nearly two years: whilst the relationship between ICANN, PTI and "its clients" is adequately monitored, tracked, reviewed and enforced through a multitude of Agreements shown in the above page, there is absolutely no mention of the IANA IPR and the IANA IPR Agreements dated 30 September 2016. - There is no tracking of it. - There is no formal governance process or oversight in ICANN for monitoring, identifying and addressing issues relating to these IPRs - There is no community consultation - There no service level expectations - There is no enforcement
It is a complete barren landscape - and this is one of the main reasons why the transfer of IANA IPR from the IETF Trust to the IETF IPMC and other important related issues have taken so much time: a complete lack of process in ICANN leading to confusion, in addition to potential breaches of the IANA IPR Agremeents dated 30 September 2016.
In addition to this, there appears to have been continued opposition from ICANN Legal to seeking independent legal advice in relation to the IANA IPR Agreements dated 30 September 2016, including but not restricted to in respect of the Issues raised in relation to and arising from the IANA IPR transfer, the IANA IPR processes, the IANA IPR Agreements and any new IANA IPR Agreements, as well as the suitability or unsuitability of the use of Novation Agreements given all of the other issues cited.
My submission recommends independent investigation, engagement of specialist Counsel (Sidley or Californian Counsel) to prepare an independent legal opinion, full community transparency, and the adoption of interim protective measures pending the negotiation of replacement instruments that genuinely address the governance failures identified.
Is ICANN ready to remedy this failure?
In Part 2 - the OCTO paper focusses solely on *protocol development* in IETF working groups. This somehow provides an incomplete picture of the extent by which ICANN has links with the IETF, although I do not know whether there is a specific reason for focussing solely on protocol development.
First, there is the excellent work of the IETF Liaison who does more than just follow these working groups. The IETF is regularly informed of ICANN Activity through the IETF Liaison and their report to the IETF Administration LLC Board and at IETF meetings which goes way further than just focussing on matters directly concerning the IETF.
Second, there are other IETF groups that have done work on topics of interest both to ICANN and the IETF - for example the IDNA and IDNAbis working groups that laid the groundwork for IDNs.
RFCs: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc4690/ in Sept 2006 https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc5891/ in Aug 2010
ICANN has since done a significant amount of work in relation to IDNs, especially when it comes to the operation of IDNs, including Label Generation Rules for various scripts. Is there a link back to the IETF for these? Should there be? Should the ICANN work be codified/recorded as IETF RFCs?
Or perhaps those in charge at ICANN see the IETF as only focussing on Protocols and implementation is not something that should be addressed at the IETF? I wonder if we could ask these questions to OCTO?
Kindest regards,
Olivier
On 21/04/2026 20:26, Judith Hellerstein via ALAC wrote:
HI All,
Thanks to Olivier and Greg for all their hard work on the IETF MOU that they put in. I want to call everyone's attention to the new publication that David Huberman put out on ICANN's relationship with the IETF. I think it was a good paper. https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/octo-043-16apr26-en.pdf
He provides a good overview of why ICANN works hard to keep up their close partnership with the IETF. In the paper he describes a relationship that is not only formal and practical, but also reciprocal. As we all know, the Internet’s unique identifier system is defined by IETF standards, and IETF participants bring technical expertise into ICANN's multistakeholder governance processes.
Since 2025, IETF working groups advanced efforts that have direct implications for how the Domain Name System (DNS) operates, from how DNS delegations work, to how domain names are provisioned, to how the cryptographic algorithms that secure the DNS are managed. This report also focuses on and offers a practical overview of what changed, what's coming, and why it matters to registry operator, registrar, DNS operator, or anyone who depends on the protocols that make the domain name ecosystem function, All in all I thought it was a good paper. The technical foundations on which the security, stability, and resilience of the Internet’s unique identifier system depend on are constantly evolving, and it is important to keep abreast of all these issues and why all constituencies within ICANN should stay abreast and work closely with the IETF as At Large has done in the past
Best,
Judith
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At-Large Online: http://www.atlarge.icann.org ALAC Working Wiki: https://community.icann.org/display/atlarge/At-Large+Advisory+Committee+(ALA...) _______________________________________________ By submitting your personal data, you consent to the processing of your personal data for purposes of subscribing to this mailing list accordance with the ICANN Privacy Policy (https://www.icann.org/privacy/policy) and the website Terms of Service (https://www.icann.org/privacy/tos). You can visit the Mailman link above to change your membership status or configuration, including unsubscribing, setting digest-style delivery or disabling delivery altogether (e.g., for a vacation), and so on.
participants (7)
-
Barrack Otieno -
Carlton Samuels -
David Mackey -
Evan Leibovitch -
hadia Elminiawi -
Judith Hellerstein -
Olivier MJ Crépin-Leblond