ICANN highlights “not getting things done” risk
ICANN’s board of directors addressed a number of existential threats at its latest workshop, including the perception that it’s simply “not getting things done.”
Chair Maarten Botterman disclosed the discussions, which took place at the end of April, in a blog post Friday.
He described how the board broke up into four “brainstorming” groups, which returned with strikingly similar views on the risks ICANN faces.
There’s a worry that the lack of in-person meetings due to the pandemic is harming ICANN’s ability to work and that various unspecified “geopolitical initiatives” may get in the way of the mission. He added:
Moreover, we recognized the risk of ICANN being seen as “not getting things done.” On the opportunity side is the broad awareness within ICANN that we need to continue to deliver on our mission in the face of new challenges, as demonstrated by the prioritization efforts of the Board, Org, and Community, and our ability to adapt to changing circumstances.
The Org and the community have been faced with what I would call organizational inertia in recent months and years.
I wrote a few months ago about how ICANN hadn’t implemented a policy since December 2016 — more than five years previously.
Major issues facing the industry seem to be either stuck in endless feedback loops of community arguments or interminable Org preparatory work.
The SSAD, pitched as a solution to the problem of Whois access, appears doomed to be scrapped entirely or approved in a much-reduced form that many believe will not address the problem of identifying registrants in a post-GDPR world.
And even if the stripped-back SSAD Light gets approved, there’s a good chance this will add many months to the runway of the next round of new gTLDs, which itself is at an impasse because the Governmental Advisory Committee and the the GNSO cannot agree on whether to allow closed generics.
As it stands, 10 years after the last application round new gTLD policy is in the Operational Design Phase within Org, and not expected to come before the board until late this year. Much of what has been disclosed about the ODP to date looks a lot like wheel-spinning.
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