Advertisement
Promo

Online business Toolkit

ICANN proposes new Net tax

Declan McCullagh CNET News

Published: 16 Dec 2004 15:50 GMT

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

VeriSign, which currently has the contract to run the master .com and .net databases, broadly endorses the 75-cent fee. Tom Galvin, a VeriSign vice president, said his company is "supportive of the idea of a development fund" of the sort that ICANN wants to create through domain name levies.

It could "better the Internet either by improving the stability and security of the Internet or helping with best practices or helping to move Internet development into other regions", Galvin said. "There are a lot of ways to do that. The fee is one of them."

According to the limited information that ICANN has made available, the fund in part will effectively transfer money from people in developed countries that use .net and similar domains to less-developed countries in Africa and South America. The fund will "enable further participation in the ICANN mission by developing country stakeholders", ICANN says, perhaps by paying travel costs so representatives from those nations can attend ICANN meetings.

The Commerce Department, which has some oversight authority over ICANN, said that the 75-cent fee "appears to be consistent" with the Bush administration's earlier request that ICANN broaden its funding base. That request says that ICANN should "secure the necessary financial and personnel resources critical to long-term sustainability of the organisation."

In 1999, when ICANN had proposed a $1 annual fee for each domain name, the Clinton administration shot it down. Andrew Pincus, general counsel for the Commerce Department at the time, wrote: "ICANN should eliminate the $1 per-year per domain name registration user fee."

"The world was very different five or more years ago," said Clyde Ensslin, a spokesman for the Commerce Department's National Telecommunications and Information Administration.

Tim Ruiz, vice-president for domain services at GoDaddy, said: "We don't really have a position" on the 75-cent annual fee for .net. GoDaddy says its customers have registered more than 5.3 million domains.

Ruiz said he would be concerned if the fee were extended to other domains and ICANN's budget continued to balloon unchecked. It nearly doubled, from $8.3m to $15.8m, for the fiscal year ending in June 2005. "But that's making a lot of assumptions," Ruiz said.

Next

Previous

1 2 3 4


  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendlyPrint with EPSON

Did you find this article useful?
283 out of 545 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments


Win a BlackBerry with Vlingo voice recognition

Win a BlackBerry with Vlingo voice recognition

What is ZDNet UK's usual tagline?

Competition closes - 14 Jan 2010

Video icon

Video

Google Chrome

Roundup: Full coverage of Google Chrome

The search giant has launched a beta of its own open-source browser, sending a clear challenge to Microsoft in the way it lets users work with applications More

Blog: Google Chrome has Microsoft's code inside, says MS manager

And furthermore, he says, that's a good thing... More

Blog: Google Chrome — nine things we've found since launch

Google must be very happy with the coverage Chrome has gathered. But it's not all good news... More


Skip Sub Navigation Links to CNET Brand Links

Help

Become part of the ZDNet community.

Newsletters