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Avis du GAC

Le GAC émet des avis adressés au Conseil d’administration de l’ICANN sur des dossiers de politiques susceptibles d’impliquer une interaction entre les politiques de l’ICANN et des lois, des accords internationaux ou des objectifs en matière de politiques publiques. L’avis du GAC est communiqué au Conseil d’administration de l’ICANN sous forme de Communiqué ou de correspondance officielle.

2017-03-15 2-Character Country/Territory Codes at the Second Level

Avis du GAC

Référence n° :

2017-03-15 2-Character Country/Territory Codes at the Second Level

First Delivered 15 Mar 2017 via :

ICANN58 Copenhagen Communique

Consensus :

Consensus atteint

2017-03-15 2-Character Country/Territory Codes at the Second Level

In light of the discussions with the ICANN Board in Copenhagen on the Board Resolution of 8 November 2016 and its implementation of 13 December 2016 regarding two-letter country codes as second level domains,

The GAC advises the ICANN Board to:

  1. Take into account the serious concerns expressed by some GAC Members as contained in previous GAC Advice
  2. Engage with concerned governments by the next ICANN meeting to resolve those concerns.
  3. Immediately explore measures to find a satisfactory solution of the matter to meet the concerns of these countries before being further aggravated.
  4. Provide clarification of the decision-making process and of the rationale for the November 2016 resolution, particularly in regard to consideration of the GAC advice, timing and level of support for this resolution.

Fondements

The GAC noted serious concerns expressed by some governments about the consequences introduced by the changes created by the 8 November 2016 Resolution. In particular, according to the new procedure it is no longer mandatory for the registries to notify governments of the plans for their use of 2-letter codes, nor are registries required to seek agreement of governments when releasing two-letter country codes at the second level, which, for example, allows registries to charge governments substantial fees.