Internet Community including Domain Registrars and WADND take tough stance against the proposal which gives .com domains' exclusive control to VeriSign.
A draft proposal between the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) and VeriSign, Inc. that
would give VeriSign exclusive control over the .com domain, is being
vigorously opposed by a group of notable domain registrars led by 1&1 Internet, who claim the plan harms competition within the Internet industry and could negatively impact end-users worldwide.
1&1, along with almost all major domain registrars, has
expressed disapproval at the content of the proposed agreement, which,
among other things, would allow VeriSign to arbitrarily increase domain
fees up to 7% per year, and the manner in which it was drafted.
Additionally, the registrars' concern is that VeriSign can implement
the price hikes without justification and web hosts and registrars
would be forced to pass on the fee increases to individual domain
registrants.
"The current draft of the agreement practically assigns .com to
VeriSign forever," said 1&1's Domain Expert, Eric Schaetzlein.
"This contradicts ICANN's core mission to promote competition in the
Internet industry, which was established in its own by-laws and in the
Memorandum of Understanding with the U.S. Department of Commerce."
Bhavin Turakhia, CEO of Directi, a domain registrar, also voiced his
concerns saying that, "ICANN is sort of acting more like a private
business, they've demonstrated that they don't specifically care about
the community that much."
In addition to this, a lawsuit brought by The World Association
of Domain Name Developers, Inc. (WADND) on behalf of its members around
the world, alleges that ICANN and Verisign have engaged in antitrust
activities, including conspiracy, monopolization, illegal price fixing
and monopolizing '.com' and '.net' domain name markets. The suit
alleges that the two are on the verge of entering "an unlawful
agreement that gives VeriSign a permanent monopoly over the all '.com'
and '.net' Internet domain name registrations."