ICANN Successfully Concludes Cape Town Meetings
5 December 2004
Cape Town, South Africa. This week over 735 participants from 91 countries
successfully concluded the ICANN Annual Meeting in Cape Town. The meeting
included technical and industry leaders, Internet users from Africa and
around the world, ministers and governmental representatives. ICANN stakeholders
from 25 African countries joined the proceedings.
- Africa's At-Large Internet Community members advanced awareness and
further integrated the African community in the ICANN process, creating
a much deeper understanding of the Internet landscape in Africa, and
of the challenges faced by African stakeholders.
- ICANN stakeholders held their third WSIS workshop to update the community
on proceedings within the international discussions on Internet governance.
They were addressed by a panel of African leaders who put forward many
of the key issues of developing nation Internet communities. Also addressing
the community were the newly appointed chairman of the Working Group
on Internet Governance (WGIG), Nitan Desai, Special Advisor to the Secretary
General for the World Summit on Information Society (WSIS) and Markus
Kummer, Executive Coordinator, Secretariat of the WGIG. ICANN constituency
groups agreed to formulate and sign a joint resolution regarding Internet
governance which will be included in a jointly prepared White Paper to
be distributed widely in the Internet governance discussions.
- This was the 20th meeting of ICANN's Governmental Advisory Committee
(GAC). Many GAC members were present in Cape Town -- of particular mention,
the representatives present from the Africa region were from South Africa,
Djibouti, Senegal, Sudan, Gambia and Tanzania. Outcomes of this Regional
Forum are included in the official GAC Communiqué which will be available
on its website.
- The Country Code Domain Name Supporting Organisation (ccNSO) moved
forward on discussions regarding its ccTLD Principles, and announced
its intention to review the GAC paper regarding the Principles through
its appropriate Working Group. Additionally, the ccNSO and the GAC have
established a joint liaison group which will identify issues of common
interest.
- A second IDN workshop successfully brought together experts on integrating
local languages with the global Internet. With African languages as the
focus, these experts explored the range of cultural and technical issues
that must be overcome to bring the many local language forms to everyday
use on the Internet. Participants identified topics for further discussion
and plan to continue their work in future forums.
- Frank Fowlie, the new ICANN Ombudsman, was introduced to the ICANN
community at the Cape Town meeting and announced the posting of his framework
document that can be found on the ICANN website. The appointment
of Mr. Fowlie represents ICANN's further commitment to ensuring ICANN's
accountability to the global Internet Community.
- ICANN's Board approved the finalisation of a Request for Proposals
for designating a successor operator for the .NET registry. The current
.NET Registry Agreement was signed in May 2001, and will expire on 30
June 2005. VeriSign is eligible to be considered for designation as the
successor registry operator. The procedure for selecting the successor
operator was developed through an open and transparent process incorporating
opportunities for public review and comment at multiple stages. Completed
.NET proposals will be due in January 2005. Proposals will be evaluated
by an independent third-party, based on pre-established criteria developed
through ICANN's bottom-up, consensus-based policy development system.
The designation of the successful proposal is scheduled for March 2005.