What should NA RALO's response be?
For context, here's what Milton Mueller has to say: http://blog.internetgovernance.org/blog/_archives/2010/12/3/4694980.html
DOC is right, and Milt is wrong. Milt is always wrong, so this shouldn't be a big surprise. Attempts to introduce "competition" into the DNS via adding TLDs have been, in case anyone has had their eyes shut for the past decade, a complete failure. The only change that actually has made a difference is the registry/registrar split. Look at .INFO and .BIZ to see whether clones of existing TLDs add competition. Look at .AERO, .COOP, .JOBS, .TRAVEL, and .MUSEUM to see whether topical TLDs add competition. Look at .ASIA, .CAT, and the rebranded .LA to see whether geographic TLDs add competition. Or look at .PRO and .TEL and .MOBI to see whether service-specific TLDs add competition. There was a real issue about non-ASCII TLDs which appears to be addressed by the IDN fast track. What's left? At this point the only justification for adding thousands of TLDs is that ICANN always assumed they would, and they and their hangers on will make a lot of money. If the argument is that new TLDs will add meaningful competition, nobody's offered a plausible explanation yet of how that will happen. Regards, John Levine, johnl@iecc.com, Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies", Please consider the environment before reading this e-mail. http://jl.ly