Editor’s Note: For more information about the US’s government’s relationship with ICANN, see CRE’s ICANNfocus site here. For information about ICANN being subject to the US Data Quality Act, see the CircleID site here.
From: Quartz
Written by Leo Mirani
This weekend, some 3,000 people from across the world arrived in Los Angeles for the 51st meeting of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), a nongovernmental organization that runs the web’s naming system. There is no fixed agenda; ICANN members, which include big web companies, governments, international organizations, and domain name registries and registrars, set their own topics of discussion.
But even without a formal agenda, it is clear what ICANN members be talking about through this week. There are three main items. First is the new gTLD program, underway, which is introducing hundreds of new generic top-level domain names, such as .com in qz.com, over this year and next year.
Second, members will be keen to discuss the slow withdrawal of the US government from overseeing ICANN, which is meant to be independent.
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