pg on Mon, 22 Jul 2002 12:36:01 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] NAME.SPACE TLDs and Fair Access to the ROOT.DOMAIN. |
------- Blind-Carbon-Copy From: Paul Garrin <pg@namespace.org> To: cerf@mci.net Reply-to: pg@namespace.org Subject: NAME.SPACE TLDs and Fair Access to the ROOT.DOMAIN. MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Content-ID: <24350.1027333999.1@mail.lokmail.net> Date: Mon, 22 Jul 2002 06:33:20 -0400 Sender: pg@mail.lokmail.net Dear Vint, In Washington, DC last year (2001) after your testimony at the House Commerce Committee you made a remark to me that "Why would we 'give' any TLDs to a company that's about to go BANKRUPT?" implying that Name.Space was going bankrupt. What about YOUR company, MCI/Worldcom, whose bankruptcy was allegedly caused by CORPORATE CRIME? So far, my company Name.Space, who was driven to near bankruptcy (we're NOT bankrupt) by ICANN's CORRUPTION and apparent conspiracy to control the domain market, is still here despite the fact that ICANN robbed us of $50,000.00 and hijacked 3 of our domains, 'INFO.', 'PRO.' and 'MUSEUM.' "subjectively" (as you put it in your testimony) giving them to a small circle of interests close to ICANN and the other dominant players in the DNS industry. I know that the law is not always applied equally--many believe that Name.Space should have prevailed in it's antitrust case against NSI the same way MCI won against ATT in 1983--but perhaps those in your circles who are responsible for the wrongdoings both at MCI/Worldcom and at ICANN will be brought to justice and prosecuted for their crimes. If my company ever does go bankrupt at least I will have the comfort of knowing that I worked diligently and honestly, and that if any white collar criminals are responsible for its failure, that they come not from within my company, but from without, possibly from people whom you may be familiar with. Nobody from inside NAME.SPACE stole money as the insiders of MCI/Worldcom allegedly did; our money was stolen by ICANN and its co-conspirators. As I understand it, Name.Space's application is still pending before ICANN and we intend to pursue the publication of our TLDs into the root as well as seek redress for any transgressions that may have taken place in the process of preventing us from rightfully gaining access to the root domain to publish our TLDs globally. Name.Space has been publishing new TLDs at the request of the public since 1996, PRE-DATING ICANN by more than TWO YEARS. In 1997 Name.Space sought publication of its new TLDs in the legacy ROOT through its antitrust action against Network Solutions, Inc./SAIC and through First Amendment action against the National Science Foundation, then the US Department of Commerce/ NTIA (after the NTIA took control of the NSF/NSI cooperative agreement in Sept, 1998, amending it to establish the chain of command originating at the NTIA where it lies today). See http://namespace.org/law Sincerely, Paul Garrin Founder, Name.Space <pg@namespace.org> PRINT and POST the new FREE.THE.MEDIA! Poster: http://freethemedia.org/posters/FTM-heartfield.72dpi.jpg or if you have a fast line: http://freethemedia.org/posters/FTM-heartfield.300dpi.jpg (tribute to JOHN HEARTFIELD) - --------------------------------------------------------------------- FreeTheMedia! Become a member! Support Sustainable Non-Commercial Media Infrastructure! http://FreeTheMedia.org contact <events@freethemedia.org> - --------------------------------------------------------------------- Get Private Encrypted Email: https://mail.lokmail.net Switch to Name.Space: http://namespace.org/switch ------- End of Blind-Carbon-Copy _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold