Dear Dr Akinbo, Thank you so much for sharing. This session – "The Current and Coming Impact of Artificial Intelligence on Domain Name System Abuse". I plead with anyone that missed it to look for the recording and listen to it; it was very packed with value, and the attendance online and onsite was massive. After the session, I had an opportunity to draw the attention of one of ICANN's board members to how this growing concern really calls for more engagement and actions. Interestingly, earlier in the day (June 8th), Dr Houda and I had an opportunity to present on "Agentic AI's impact on DNS" at the ISPCP work session – this further buttresses the importance of this topic. Another session that stood out for me was the "*At-Large Plenary session on UA adoption as a policy imperative"*, and our own AFRALO Chair, Hadia, and Mutegeki brought great dynamics to the table with an experienced lineup of speakers and field feedback on executing Internationalised Domain Names (IDNs) and Email Address Internationalisation (EAI). Feedback from Ghana, Spain, UNESCO and Canada and the panellists' contributions were practical and forward-looking. Cheers to Day 2 of ICANN86 Policy Forum! Tinuade Oguntuyi ICANN 84& 86 Fellow On Tue, Jun 9, 2026 at 6:50 AM Adebunmi Akinbo via At-Large < at-large@icann.org> wrote:
Dear Netizen,
ICANN86 Policy Forum officially kicked off yesterday, June 8, 2026, at the FIBES Conference and Exhibition Centre in Seville, Spain. As a dedicated Policy Forum, the atmosphere on Day One was focused, fast-paced, and highly technical, bypassing the usual ceremonial opening day fluff to dive straight into cross-community work, working group deliberations, and intense policy development.
Here is a breakdown of the core themes, critical sessions, and operational highlights that shaped Day One.
1. The Operational Friction Points: DNS Abuse & Associated Domains
The most heavily debated topic of Day One centered around DNS Abuse Mitigation and the newly launched Policy Development Process (PDP1). The discussions highlighted a widening operational divide between the security community and domain registrars.
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The Crux of the Debate: Under the current Registrar Accreditation Agreement (amended in April 2024), registrars must investigate and take action on specific, evidence-backed abuse reports (phishing, malware, botnets, spam). However, Day One saw intense debate over a new proposal: Associated Domain Checks. -
The Argument for Expansion: Security advocates and community members argued that malicious actors rarely register a single domain; they deploy dozens at scale using identical payment methods or registration patterns. Under PDP1, proponents want to mandate that when one domain is flagged, registrars must look at the entire account. -
The Registrar Counter-Argument: Registrar representatives expressed deep concern over the operational burden and compliance unpredictability. Shifting from single-domain validation to account-wide investigations creates massive resource strain, especially given the flexible phrase "reasonably available information" used in the draft text, which registrars argue lacks a clear compliance baseline.
2. Plenary Spotlight: AI and the Scale of Abuse.
The afternoon featured a critical cross-community plenary session: "The Current and Coming Impact of Artificial Intelligence on Domain Name System Abuse." This marks the first time AI's role in infrastructure abuse has been elevated to a primary plenary focus at an ICANN meeting.
The Core Takeaway: ICANN’s historical contractual frameworks were built around human-operated abuse at human scale. The consensus in the room was that AI tools have fundamentally broken that model by enabling bad actors to automate bulk domain registrations, generate flawlessly localized phishing content, and clone malicious sites instantly. The community began mapping out how ICANN's multistakeholder model must evolve to counter machine-scale threats.
3. Supporting Organizations & Advisory Committees (SO/AC) in Motion
Because the Policy Forum structure prioritizes deep-dive work, individual stakeholder groups hit the ground running:
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GNSO (Generic Names Supporting Organization): Beyond the DNS Abuse PDP1 working sessions, the GNSO prioritized progress on the Latin Script Diacritics PDP WG (addressing how single registry operators handle ASCII vs. diacritic versions of a gTLD). Additionally, the SSAD (Standardized System for Access and Disclosure) Supplemental Recommendations Team followed up on their Day 0 marathon meeting to refine findings from the Registration Data Request System (RDRS). -
GAC (Governmental Advisory Committee): The GAC spent Day One coordinating its priority tracks for the week. Government representatives focused heavily on preparation for the next round of the New gTLD Program, ensuring that applicant support mechanisms for underserved regions are operationally feasible. -
ccNSO (Country Code Names Supporting Organization): Focused heavily on DNS resilience, holding regional updates and mapping out how global regulatory changes (like NIS2 in Europe and similar frameworks worldwide) are impacting local country-code registry operations. -
ALAC (At-Large Advisory Committee): Maintained a heavy cross-community presence, bridging the gap between technical policy and end-user impacts, with a sharp focus on Universal Acceptance (UA) and multilingual digital inclusion.
Looking Ahead to Day Two
The momentum from Day One sets up a packed schedule for today. Expect ongoing gridlock-breaking discussions on the operational boundaries of Associated Domain Checks, further strategy sessions on the next round of New gTLDs, and joint bilateral meetings between Advisory Committees to find consensus on registration data access.
Check out more news on ICANN News <https://info.icann.org/index.php/email/emailWebview?tkn_set=NTI5LUNSRS03MTcA...>.
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