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GAC MEETINGS
Meeting 8: Melbourne - 9-10 March 2001
GOVERNMENTAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE COMMUNIQUE
Melbourne, Australia - March 2001
SATURDAY 10 March 2001: The Governmental Advisory Committee (GAC)
of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN)
held its eighth meeting in Melbourne, Australia, yesterday and today.
The attending GAC Members, representing 32 national governments,
distinct economies as recognised in international fora and
multinational governmental and treaty organisations, had fruitful
discussions across issues relating to the Internet worldwide, and
issued the following statement:
- With regard to the election of the First Chair of the
Governmental Advisory Committee, that:
The GAC has held the First Election for Chair of the GAC, and
that Dr Paul Twomey of Australia, the Initial Chair, was elected as
Chair of the GAC, to serve for a term of two years, in accordance
with the GAC Operating Principles.
- With regard to issues relating to the delegation and
administration of country code top level domains (ccTLDs) that:
The GAC had a constructive, open and useful dialogue with the
ccTLD Constituency of the Domain Name Supporting Organisation (DNSO),
and the ICANN Board and staff, on issues relating to the
delegation and administration of ccTLDs.
The GAC reaffirms its commitment to the appropriateness of a
three-party communications regime among ICANN, the relevant
government or public authority and the ccTLD administrator, as
provided for in the GAC document "Principles for the
Delegation and Administration of Country Code Top Level
Domains" (the GAC Principles). The GAC considers that such a
three-party regime should be the goal of relationships between
ICANN and ccTLD administrators, and GAC members will take steps to
facilitate implementation of the GAC Principles.
Meanwhile, should ICANN and the ccTLD administrator envisage
entering into bilateral ("legacy") agreements, such
agreements should be provisional and interim in nature, pending
appropriate expression by the relevant government or public
authority for participation in a tri-partite regime.
Any bilateral agreements should contain provisions for early
termination should a tri-partite communications regime be reached
within the term of such an agreement.
There should be no such bilateral agreements in the following
three cases:
- with administrators of ccTLDs for which redelegation requests
are pending;
- in instances where the relevant government or public authority
has advised ICANN that it is taking steps to implement a
tri-partite regime; or
- where the ccTLD administrator is not within the jurisdiction of
the relevant government or public authority, unless the relevant
government or public authority is comfortable with such an
arrangement.
- With regard to GAC working methods, that:
In recognition of its goal to implement efficient procedures in
support of ICANN and to provide thorough and timely advice and
analysis of relevant matters of interest to governments and public
authorities, the GAC has established working groups to examine and
report on issues for consideration, including issues relating to:
- multilingual domain names;
- geographic and geopolitical terms as top level and second level
domains; and
- the applicability of international conventions.
- With regard to international domain names (IDNs), the GAC
confirms the importance and interests of this development to the
benefit of Internet users worldwide. Further, regarding IDNs ,
including testbed initiatives, the GAC considers that three key
public policy areas need to be kept at the forefront of the
considerations of ICANN, its Supporting Organisations and the
broader Internet community. These are:
- the essential importance of interoperability of the present and
future Internet;
- the prevention of cybersquatting and resolution of disputes in
the IDNs environments should be addressed by appropriate means and
processes such as an appropriate dispute resolution policy and
implementation of sunrise periods; and
- the application of competition and market access, consumer
protection and intellectual property principles.
Specifically, the GAC states that:
Anti-cybersquatting principles and mechanisms should translate
from the current ASCII character set environment to any non-ASCII
character set environments, and that technological implementation
should appropriately keep pace with any developments in this area.
Preserving the universal connectivity and accessibility domain
name system is vital to the continuance of the Internet as a
global network. While various technical experimentation may need
to be investigated in the pursuit of unified standards,
ultimately, a unified or interoperable standards for multilingual
domain names should be achieved, with the ability of systems to
work ubiquitously across the Internet.
IDNs registration in top level domains should benefit from
effective and fair conditions of competition, at appropriate
levels and scale of activity. ICANN should take steps to
communicate to operators of IDNs testbeds that they should note
any legal obligation they have to inform consumers regarding both
the status and operation of their testbeds, including the status
of their registrations within that testbed, particularly in
circumstances where registrations are taken prior to full system
implementation.
The GAC notes its thanks to the Government of Australia, and
particularly to Australia’s National Office for the Information
Economy, for hosting its meeting and for hosting and administering the
GAC website.
The next meeting of the GAC will be held in June 2001 in Stockholm,
Sweden, to coincide with ICANN’s next round of meetings.
Return to GAC Webpage
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