I disagree with your assessment of community support for the program. There was a supermajority vote which approved the new TLD principles, including support of the BC and IPC, because we believe that business users of the DNS would be better off with more domain name choices, more registration service providers, and IDN TLDs, . The ICANN Board was nearly unanimous in approving the current implementation plan. The BC is still in favor of new TLDs, even if we have some reservations about some of the implementation details. There is broad community support for them, even if there also remains some broad opposition from some business/IP groups who are noisily repeating some of the arguments that have been made by the BC and others repeatedly for years. So, I am not clear about what you would like the BC to say publicly at this point, perhaps you could circulate a draft? Thanks, Mike Mike Rodenbaugh RODENBAUGH LAW tel/fax: +1.415.738.8087 http://rodenbaugh.com -----Original Message----- From: owner-bc-gnso@icann.org [mailto:owner-bc-gnso@icann.org] On Behalf Of Mike Roberts Sent: Wednesday, December 07, 2011 2:38 PM To: bc - GNSO list Subject: [bc-gnso] ICANN hearings Reading over today's testimony, one can't help but have the feeling that ICANN is digging itself deeper and deeper into a bunker position from which it may not recover. I'm reminded of the gigantic underground cistern located near the Blue Mosque in Istanbul. Worth a trip if you haven't seen it. After the collapse of the Roman Empire, the Goths and so on came down the peninsula and ravaged the city. So walls were built. Then sieges were put in place and folks ran out of water. So at great expense the cistern was dug and covered over. Then longer sieges, etc. The invaders prevailed. The moral being that some ideas are so flawed that no amount of building walls thicker and cisterns deeper will carry the day. The Kurt Pritz testimony goes on for more than 15 pages trying to cover every possible contingency of bad behavior connected to new TLDs. And doesn't succeed. Even though the BC membership includes members with multiple relationships to ICANN, some of which are linked to proposed new TLDs, the core rationale for our constituency is to represent business users of the Domain Name System. Setting aside IDNs, which have their own rationale, I haven't seen any enthusiasm for new TLDs among users, and most of us have been opposed but willing to work on the details with ICANN because that seemed better than letting it happen without any input from us. What we have gotten for our trouble is Kurt claiming in his testimony that there is broad community support for new TLDs. That has never been the case. The ever greater accretion of protective bureaucracy to the program has produced a balance of costs and benefits - in the broad sense, including more than dollars and cents - that is seriously out of whack. It's time for us to acknowledge this, and say so publicly. - Mike