[governance] <nettime> name.space sues ICANN over 189 TLDs
michael gurstein
gurstein at gmail.com
Sun Oct 14 20:21:34 EDT 2012
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Sent: Monday, October 15, 2012 5:32 AM
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Subject: [SPAM] <nettime> name.space sues ICANN over 189 TLDs
http://domainincite.com/10754-company-files-for-injunction-against-189-new-g
tlds
Company files for injunction against 189 new gTLDs
Kevin Murphy, October 12, 2012, 21:48:52 (UTC), in
Registries
Alternate root player Name.Space has sued ICANN for trademark
infringement and anti-competitive behavior, saying "insiders" have
conspired to keep it out of the new gTLD program.
If successful, the suit would prevent dozens of new gTLD applicants
from having their applications approved.
The lawsuit, filed in California this week, follows a warning the
company fired at ICANN this March.
While only ICANN is named as a defendant, the suit alleges that the new
gTLD program was crafted by and is dominated by "ICANN insiders" and
"industry titans".
It wants an injunction preventing ICANN delegating any of the 189 gTLD
strings that it claims it has rights to.
It also fingers several current and former ICANN directors, including
current and former chairs Steve Crocker and Peter Dengate Thrush, over
their alleged conflicts of interest.
Name.Space has been operating 482 diverse TLDs -- such as .news,
.sucks, and .mail -- in a lightly used alternate root system since
1996.
Most people can't access these zones and are unaware that they exist.
The company applied to have 118 of these strings added to the root in
ICANN's "proof of concept" gTLD expansion in 2000, when the application
fee was $50,000, but was unsuccessful.
Now, the company claims the new gTLD program is "an attack on
name.space's business model and a mean by which to create and maintain
market power in the TLD markets".
The complaint (pdf) states:
Rather than adopting a procedure to account for the pending 2000
Application and facilitate the expansion of TLD providers in the
DNS, ICANN has adopted a procedure so complex and expensive that it
once again effectively prohibited newcomers from competing. It
instead has permitted participation solely by ICANN insiders and
industry titans.
If it had applied for all 118 again in this year's round, it would have
cost almost $22 million (though it would have qualified for an $83,000
discount on a single bid).
Name.Space is asking for damages and an injunction preventing ICANN
from approving 189 gTLDs that match those it currently operates in its
alternate root.
The full list of affected applications is attached to the complaint.
(c) 2010-2012 TLD Research Ltd
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