Houston Chronicle

Sale of dot-org suffix is nixed after protests

- By Tali Arbel

NEW YORK — After widespread opposition, the organizati­on overseeing internet domain names has voted against the $1.1 billion sale of the dot-org online registry to an investment firm.

The board of the Los Angelesbas­ed Internet Corporatio­n for Assigned Names and Numbers voted late Thursday not to allow the sale to Ethos Capital of the website suffix that is widely used by nonprofits and community groups.

Activists, politician­s and hundreds of organizati­ons had protested that costs for non-profits would rise and freedom of expression would be at risk if a for-profit company were in charge of dotorg, one of the original domains created in the mid-1980s.

Vetoing the sale is “reasonable, and the right thing to do,” said ICANN’s chair, Maarten Botterman, in a blog post.

Botterman noted the “fundamenta­l public interest nature” of the organizati­on that currently oversees dot-org. That would have been transferre­d to one “bound to serve the interests of its corporate stakeholde­rs” had the sale gone through, he said.

He also expressed concern over what the debt involved in the transactio­n would mean for those dot-org users, which include public radio broadcaste­r NPR, the Metropolit­an Museum of Art and medical humanitari­an group Doctors Without Borders.

Ethos Capital and the Internet Society, the nonprofit founded by many of the internet’s early engineers and scientists that currently runs the registry, had said concerns were misplaced. Ethos had offered concession­s including capping price hikes.

The investment firm said in a statement that the decision “will suffocate innovation and deter future investment in the domain industry” and that it is evaluating its options. The Internet Society said it is disappoint­ed “that ICANN has acted as a regulatory body it was never meant to be.”

The Electronic Frontier Foundation, which had campaigned against the sale, said ICANN’s decision was a “stunning victory for nonprofits and NGOs around the world working in the public interest.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States