ICANN and Iraq: Suffering Along

By Andy Oram

I thought of ICANN yesterday when reading about the devolution of the Iraqi Governing Council, which managed to unite for just a moment to approve a constitution with about the half-life of lutetium. ICANN and the IGC: two institutions put in charge of ill-behaved constituencies and stuck in chronic failure mode. Could anything be learned by examining them at arm's length? Indeed, different as they are, their histories contain several common elements.


The essential defect underlying all these problems is that each system deals with constituencies that disagree deeply on where the systems are heading.

ICANN will not become effective because there is no clear definition in the area of names and numbers about what effectiveness is, despite claims of interest among all parties for reliability, competition, and so forth. What is a good domain name system? One where names clearly indicate the weight and authority of the owner, as in a trademark? Or where anybody can have a desired domain name and where the names are catchy and evocative?

The IGC will not become effective because, even though most Iraqis seem to value the same things people value everywhere (security in their homes, control over the forces that determine their lives, cultural preservation, and so on) too many forces pull them in different directions. On the role of women, the degree of decentralization for Kurds, and foreign ownership of the economy, just to name three huge questions, they can't find a common ground--at least a common ground that their occupiers would accept.

Meanwhile, each institution muddles along while accumulating bad decisions and a history that causes observers to hold their noses. We may be stuck with them, though. Perhaps, this weary observer thinks, it's time to leave them alone and see whether they can limp along to their finish lines--whatever those may be.

By Andy Oram, Editor at O'Reilly & Associates

Related topics: DNS, Domain Names, ICANN, Security

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