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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Friday, May 18, 2001
Commerce
Ensures Competitiveness and Stability are Protected in New ICANN-VeriSign
Agreement
Privatization
of Domain Name System Advances
Washington,
DC - The U.S. Department of Commerce (DOC) today approved new
agreements between the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers
(ICANN) and VeriSign on domain name registries for .com, .net and .org.
They revise agreements that have been in place since November 1999.
"Our goal
throughout the negotiating process was to make sure consumers reap the
benefits of an open, stable and competitive Internet. These agreements
achieve that goal," said DOC General Counsel Ted Kassinger. "We sought
changes to promote competition, preserve stability and protect consumers.
We believe that our objectives have been met."
The following
principles will be included in definitive contracts:
- VeriSign
agreed that DOC's approval does not give the company antitrust immunity
with regard to these agreements.
- As an
additional precaution to ensure the integrity of the "firewall" between
VeriSign's registry and registrar businesses, VeriSign will be subject
to annual independent audits, which will be submitted to ICANN, DOC
and the Department of Justice. A summary of these audits will be made
public to ensure transparency.
- VeriSign's
.net registry agreement will now expire on June 30, 2005, unless data
indicate competition in the registry or registrar market is not growing
and meeting established goals. (A specific set of indices will be used
to measure competitiveness.) If competition goals are not met, VeriSign's
registry agreement for .net could expire as early as November 2003.
When VeriSign's .net agreement expires, operation of the .net registry
will be opened for competition.
All other
terms of the agreements between VeriSign and ICANN remain unchanged.
Today's agreement
follows a month-long process of careful scrutiny by the Commerce Department
of draft revised agreements presented by ICANN and VeriSign on April 16,
which resulted in changes that reflect the Department's paramount concerns:
to ensure stability and competition.
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