On 10/09/2010 08:55 PM, Jorge Amodio wrote:
As I mentioned several times in the past, it is a shame that ICANN is a member-less organization, since changes to its articles of incorporation and bylaws would require the vote of its members...
Yes - for details of those rights see http://www.cavebear.com/archive/icann-board/platform.htm#full-members ICANN actively and quite overtly pursed a course to try to evade being classified as a "membership" flavor of a California public-benefit corporation. Because elections trigger that status ICANN called the election of year 2000 a "selection". Shakespeare said that a rose by any other name is still a rose. I guess ICANN doesn't read Shakespeare. ICANN was, and I assume still is, in deadly fear of "derivative actions", a form of legal action in which members can cause the corporation to sue itself for failures to behave correctly. The concept of "accountability" involves the question of "to whom is that duty of accountability owed?". A secondary question then is "how do those to whom that duty owed enforce that duty?" These are good questions to ask. --karl--