Building on the rapid momentum of the opening sessions, Day Two of the ICANN86 Policy Forum at the FIBES Centre shifted the focus from broad technical threats toward operational deadlines, geopolitical alignment, and structural overhauls.
With the window for the Next Round of New generic Top-Level Domains (gTLDs) rapidly closing, Tuesday's sessions focused heavily on the mechanics of internationalized scripts, structural digital equity, and global regulatory compliance.
Here are the key developments, operational friction points, and community movements that defined Day Two.
1. The Clock Ticks Down on the Next Round of New gTLDs
A dominant theme across multiple stakeholder sessions was the looming countdown for the first new gTLD application window in 14 years, which is officially set to close on August 12, 2026.
· The Operational Reality: The Generic Names Supporting Organization (GNSO) and the Governmental Advisory Committee (GAC) spent considerable time reviewing the readiness of the application systems. The community is under immense pressure to finalize the rulebooks, particularly regarding the Applicant Support Program (ASP).
· The Global South Dynamic: In joint discussions, representatives pushed for concrete guarantees that the ASP is reaching its intended targets—specifically small businesses, non-profits, and community networks in the Global South. Advocates emphasized that reduced application fees are meaningless without simultaneous, operational pro bono mentorship and localized legal support to navigate ICANN’s complex evaluation architecture.
2. End-User Safety and Rights: The Safer Cyber Campaign & udrpdefense.org
Intertwined with the rollout of new gTLDs was an intensified focus on protecting internet end-users and the legal rights of legitimate domain name holders. A joint session between the At-Large Advisory Committee (ALAC) and the Security and Stability Advisory Committee (SSAC) heavily featured the Safer Cyber Campaign. This community-driven initiative aims to unify global grassroots networks to identify vulnerability gaps, curb malicious digital activities, and build user-focused toolkits that ensure security threats don't disproportionately harm everyday internet consumers.
Simultaneously, discussions highlighted major advancements in helping domain name holders defend their rights against predatory corporate overreach. Legal and technical advocates showcased the upcoming plans for udrpdefense.org, an ICANN Grant Program-funded initiative.
Focus on udrpdefense.org: Operating as a specialized digital legal clinic, the project announced rollouts for open educational resources, free practical toolkits, and structured pro bono legal assistance. The objective is to empower individuals, non-profits, and small-to-medium enterprises (SMEs) to mount timely, robust defenses under ICANN's Uniform Domain-Name Dispute-Resolution Policy (UDRP), leveling the playing field against Reverse Domain Name Hijacking.
3. Geopolitical Alignment & The Internet Trust Architecture
The Country Code Names Supporting Organization (ccNSO) sessions highlighted a growing operational headache for registry operators: navigating a fragmenting global regulatory landscape, heavily driven by Europe's NIS2 Directive.
· The Friction Point: While ccTLDs are traditionally governed by local, domestic policies, the cross-border nature of internet security means European regulations are reshaping global expectations for registration data validation.
· Data Accuracy vs. Privacy: Registry operators detailed the massive technical adjustments required to comply with stricter identity verification laws. For many registries operating with lean infrastructure, mandating high-level validation on registration data threatens to increase operational costs and cause friction for legitimate registrants, sparking intense technical debates on how to automate these checks securely without violating local privacy frameworks.
Amidst these fragmentation fears, a core talking point across multiple technical working groups was safeguarding the integrity of the broader Internet Trust Architecture. Panelists emphasized that the internet functions as a single, globally interoperable network because it relies on two pillars: open technical standards and a unified registry of unique identifiers. Policy experts argued that security regulations must align with this fundamental technical architecture rather than imposing proprietary or fragmented top-down mandates that risk breaking global connectivity.
4. Linguistic Sovereignty & Universal Acceptance (UA)
A major highlight of the afternoon was the progress made by the GNSO’s Latin Script Diacritics Policy Development Process Working Group (PDP WG), alongside technical briefings on Universal Acceptance.
· The Standard: Universal Acceptance—the concept that all valid domain names and email addresses, regardless of script or language, must be accepted equally by all internet-enabled applications—moved from a theoretical goal to a hard policy track.
· The Technical Hurdle: The Latin Diacritics WG focused heavily on resolving how a single registry operator can seamlessly and simultaneously deploy both the standard ASCII version of a gTLD and its variant using diacritics. The goal is to ensure that users who naturally type with accents or non-English characters do not face artificial barriers, effectively advancing the cause of linguistic sovereignty within the core infrastructure of the root zone.
5. The Impending DNSSEC Key Rollover Warning
Tucked into the technical briefings was a critical, high-stakes operational warning directed at the global network operations community: the upcoming DNSSEC Root Key Rollover scheduled for October 11, 2026.
· The Operational Imperative: ICANN staff and technical working groups issued a strong reminder that DNS operators globally must update their DNSSEC trust anchors before the October deadline. Failure to do so will cause immediate resolution failures across every single DNSSEC-validated domain they serve, effectively rendering vast swathes of the secure internet unreachable for their user bases.
Looking Ahead to Day Three
As ICANN86 enters its second half tomorrow, the focus will turn toward cross-community wrap-ups and consensus-building. Expect high-stakes bilateral meetings between the GAC and the ICANN Board, where government representatives will seek firm commitments on the final framework for the Applicant Support Program and data access verification.
Additionally, working groups will look to cement the draft text on Associated Domain Checks before the Policy Forum draws to a close.
Check out a Tribute to Arinola Akinyemi.