Well said, Steve. Perfect analogy!
Kind regards,
RA
Ronald N. Andruff
RNA Partners, Inc.
From:
owner-bc-gnso@icann.org [mailto:owner-bc-gnso@icann.org] On Behalf Of Steve DelBianco
Sent: Monday, June 20, 2011 10:38
PM
To: 'bc-GNSO@icann.org GNSO list'
Subject: [bc-gnso] CircleID Post:
ICANN approves expansion plan for top-level domains (TLDs)
Here's my post regarding ICANN Board
approval of expansion plan for top-level domains (TLDs).
See below or link
The ICANN community here
in
Actually, marathon is
probably the wrong analogy. Try this:
A month from now, our
host city of
That's where the ICANN
community is now — just off the starting line for the longest and hardest stage
of the race. How we run this stage will determine whether or not new TLDs
succeed from the standpoint of the stakeholder groups that really matter:
domain registrants and Internet users.
The first stage of the
TLD triathlon — the open-water swim — was a painstaking, community-driven
policy development process that took the better part of five years. It had all
the feeling of a swim in the open sea, requiring constant movement without much
forward progress. But we eventually stumbled onto the beach only to begin an
unexpectedly contentious stage two.
The second stage of the TLD
triathlon — the bike race — was the ICANN Board's six-month saga of
high-pressure, high-stakes negotiations with the Government Advisory Committee.
Like a bike race, it was fast and dangerous, putting at risk everything that
was accomplished in the prior stage. Monday's 13-1 vote in favor of TLD
expansion was like the race stage, where you feel grateful just for having
survived.
That brought us to what
I and several board members called "the end of the beginning”.
Now ICANN faces stage three: the long-haul work of implementing the most
ambitious undertaking yet.
This next stage is no
victory lap. The global Internet community — including many stakeholders who
weren't satisfied with the outcome of the policy development process — will be
watching ICANN's every move to find an excuse to supplant its multi-stakeholder
model with traditional multi-government models like the UN.
ICANN board resolution
leaves enough unfinished business for stakeholders to spend the next year
tweaking the "final" guidebook, even as ICANN's foot-weary staff does
the difficult work of putting it into effect.
During this stage of the
race, ICANN must uphold its signature commitments to accountability and
transparency. As the process evolves in keeping with today's resolution, ICANN
must also uphold the multistakeholder model and avoid any closed-door,
staff-driven shortcuts that might seem expedient as the running gets harder.
Given the timeline
approved this week, we're likely to see our first new gTLDs sometime in 2013.
If we all start running now, we can finish the TLD Triathlon and throw a real
party — in about two years.
--
Steve DelBianco
Executive Director
NetChoice
+1.202.420.7482