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New gTLDs and the 1%

Nov 16th, 2011

While Occupy Wall Street and other groups representing the so-called 99% are getting most of the press, the 1% is raising its profile as well, at least when it comes to gTLDs. They are complaining that introducing global choice and competition to the Internet will cost them money. The chief of the Association of National Advertisers (ANA) now says that it has “spent the last few months” considering the new gTLD program, and has found it lacking. They want ICANN to shut the whole thing down.

The ANA sprang up in August to “vigorously oppose” the new gTLD program. Recently it has morphed into a larger group called CRIDO, and this group (which, ironically, counts among its membership companies that are actively pursuing new gTLDs) is picking up the pace by issuing more threats at ICANN, telling them that they must abandon the new gTLD program or — something. There are vague murmurs of a lawsuit, which I’ll discuss below. Their number one cause of complaint? New gTLDs will cost “the industry” money.

ICANN has seen fit to allow this opposition to go unanswered for nearly two months. It might therefore be useful to review why the CRIDO effort is doomed to failure, and why it deserves its doom. While the companies behind CRIDO and the ANA are powerful, in this case the 1% is not going to frustrate innovation in the name of keeping a small blip in “industry” costs. This article explains why they won’t succeed.

“Facts”

The ANA and CRIDO may control 99% of the money, but they have about 1% of the facts. Facts may not matter that much when you’re running a FUD (fear, uncertainty, and doubt) campaign, but for completeness’ sake it is worth pointing out that the figures being presented by the ANA and CRIDO have as tenuous a relationship with reality as Somalia does with law and order.

As Jeff Ernst of Forrester Research points out in a recent article, the ANA claims that new gTLDs will cost their members “billions of dollars” without once providing any verifiable basis for this claim.

Minds + Machines, by contrast, put together a study, “What Cost New gTLD Trademark Infringements to Brands?” that is easily replicable by anyone. Completely fact-based, relying on publicly available data, our study shows that infringements are correlated very highly with volume, and that if new gTLDs increase the number of names in the market by 15%, there would be an additional 316 UDRP filings per year, or an average of ten cents cost per trademark. If the domain name market grew more (which indicates greater public benefit), there would undoubtedly be more UDRPs, but the costs would remain very low.

GoDaddy has also done a study, which concludes that UDRPs have gone up in volume due as much to the ease of filing as to any increase in cybersquatting:

Although there is little doubt that the ongoing practice of cybersquatting factors into the tide of arbitration cases, the ease of filing, along with more vigilance on the part of IP holders, undoubtedly influenced the measurable increase in cases.

In addition ICANN has hired numerous economists, who all reach the same conclusion: yes, there will be costs to brands, and even though the public benefits are not yet clear, there are some obvious benefits that can be predicted. In general (the economists say) competition is in general a good thing, and there is certainly no compelling case to be made that the introduction of new gTLDs will cause harms that will outweigh the public good.

Last Come, First Served?

The ANA and CRIDO face a credibility problem. After 5 years (or 10 years, depending on how you count) of very public, noisy, open debate about these issues, these groups show up (or are formed) at the 13th hour, after the gTLD policy was approved and the ship had left the harbor. Where were they all these years? The ANA published some comments on the 2nd Draft of the Applicant Guidebook, but otherwise, in face of the program that they now claim is the worst thing since unsliced bread, they were completely silent. Although their absence wouldn’t matter much if they had some compelling evidence, they don’t. In effect, what they are saying is that we never gave it much thought, but now that they’ve woken up, they want everything changed. Try going to GoDaddy and telling them that you’ve suddenly realized that sex.com is valuable, and they need to overturn all their procedures and give it to you because you want it. The ANA is receiving a distinct lack of sympathy around their timing.

Congressional Hearings to Protect the 1%?

It appears that there is no appetite in Congress for hearings on this subject, even leaving aside the questions of whether the U.S. can or should act unilaterally. Of course appetites in Congress can be created, and that is what CRIDO is trying to do. But “Protect the 1%!” is hardly a rallying cry in the U.S. these days.

What Does the U.S. Government Think?

The NTIA, an arm of the Department of Commerce that oversees ICANN, has been lobbied intensively by interests opposed to the new gTLD program for the better part of a decade. The extensive new protections for trademarks are one result, as is the the Early Warning System for governments worried about TLDs that might threaten law and order. Another indication of the view of the U.S. Administration comes from the modified IANA contract specification. The IANA is the largely technical function, now in ICANN’s hands, that would actually enter new gTLDs into the root zone. The IANA contract comes up for bid periodically, and it would be a disaster for ICANN to have IANA’s technical function changed into a technical + policy function — effectively adding another layer of policy development on top of ICANN’s, outside and separate from the multistakeholder model and controlled exclusively by the U.S. Government. There was some fear of this when the bid specifications first came out. The initial Notice of Inquiry said:

For delegation requests for new generic TLDS (gTLDs), the Contractor shall include documentation to demonstrate how the proposed string has received consensus support from relevant stakeholders and is supported by the global public interest.

But the amended notice says:

The contractor shall verify all requests related to the delegation and redelegation of gTLDs are consistent with the procedures developed by ICANN. In making a delegation or redelegation request, the Contractor must provide documentation verifying that ICANN followed its policy framework including specific documentation demonstrating how the process provided the opportunity for input from relevant stakeholders and was supportive of the global public interest.

In other words, the US Government has removed the policy-making component from the IANA contract. Instead of IANA making a decision about whether the application is in the public interest, IANA is now asked only whether ICANN policy was followed. This is very a much of vote of confidence in ICANN policies, and a turning away from setting up any alternate source of authority. Asking the U.S. Government to overturn a process it initiated, participated in, and supports seems forlorn — especially when just two days ago they received the blessing of the European Union, who said in a press release, “the new IANA tender is a clear step forward for global internet governance.”

Overturning 10 Years of Global Consensus Based on a Lobbying Campaign

Even if ICANN really wanted to be ordered around by trade associations, it really doesn’t have the power to just overturn policy that’s been developed through its processes. The Board does have a lot of power, but overturning the new gTLD program, with its hundreds of thousands of volunteer hours, its votes of consensus on provisions, its carefully tuned compromises, is tantamount to throwing away its entire governance model. If CRIDO really expects ICANN to abandon the gTLD program, it needs to provide a rationale of why the multi-stakeholder process is a mistake and should be jettisoned. Until it can do that convincingly, ICANN can’t cancel or even much modify the gTLD program — and the governments who have lined up behind ICANN’s governance model (including the U.S.) will have a hard time supporting any initiative that vitiates it.

ICANN Has Been Preparing for This

ICANN fully expects to be sued over the new gTLD program. They believe this for the same reason that it took them ten years to come up with the new gTLD program — there are huge number of affected people, and you won’t make all of them happy. That’s why ICANN has fully examined the legality of their program, and has set aside a lot of money to fight any challenges. Where do you think a big portion of that $185,000 fee is going to be spent? ICANN has budgeted a large amount to be spent in court. I can guarantee that ICANN has spent a lot more time thinking about this than the ANA has.

On What Grounds Would an Injunction Be Granted?

If the ANA or CRIDO were to sue ICANN, on what grounds would they succeed in getting a judge to enjoin ICANN from continuing the program? I’m not a lawyer, but I invite those who are to comment and present an compelling rationale. I haven’t heard any.

Why Are They Doing This?

The effort of ANA and CRIDO has been pretty substantial. They have already spent more in lobbying and marketing than any introduction of new gTLDs could cost them. So the question is, why? Why are they putting all this effort, so late in the day, into a cause that seems quixotic at best? The answer has nothing to do with defensive registrations, or cybersquatting. Instead, it’s because new gTLDs will change the face of advertising and branding, and like a lot entrenched industries, they’re terrified of change. Here’s what Thom Kennon, SVP and Director of Strategy at Y&R says:

Shame on the ANA for taking such a misinformed and myopic view of one of the most significant changes in how brands and consumers find each other since the birth of the commercial Web.

Although none of us have any idea of the broad, deep implications of this re-architecting of the interwebs, it doesn’t take much of a creative bent to see the powerful opportunities this will likely afford every brand — and organization, and industry and even cities, states and towns.

Unlike the ANA – whose argument here seems to be nothing more than a repetitive loop of “ICANN’s wrong, it doesn’t add up…”- some of us are working to explore what this change might offer for the future of the brands and businesses we represent.

As the ANA (and sadly any of its members who take this Luddite advice) sit on the sidelines, some of us are exploring how the early brand movers – in the right category with the right architectural strategy – can reap huge, long-term rewards and competitive advantage from leading instead of lagging.

Here’s some better advice: every single brand manager, marketing strategist, technologist, content developer and CMO should start spending some serious time understanding what these changes can and will bring to how the ‘human web’ is evolving. Be smart, nimble and opportunistic and be ready to steal the march from those who chose to worry and wait.

What Would Happen if the ANA Got Its Way?

People who have been involved in the ICANN process scratching their heads. Where were all these companies and associations over the last five years of policy developments? What is this group and what is their aim? Are they really going to sue, and do they have any hope of succeeding? Is there anything fact-based about their assertion, or is this a pure lobbying play? And since ICANN is in its usual dilatory fashion saying nothing in response to these groups, many are wondering what’s going on, and what will happen to the new gTLD program.

The ANA and CRIDO, using the same arguments, but in a louder voice, are not going to succeed in overturning a hard-fought consensus that has involved all the significant interests in the space. The arguments have been taken seriously, been given years of hearings, have resulted in numerous changes to the gTLD program to accommodate the concerns that they raise, additional protections have been put in place, and the finally the program passed on a vote by the ICANN Board. Governments, businesses, intellectual property owners, ISPs, civil society, everyone participated.

Internet innovation doesn’t stop because it upsets someone’s business model. Let me refer readers to an article published in 1995 by Newsweek (now nearly defunct). Among other the many reasons it gives as to why the Internet will never work, it says:

The truth is no online database will replace your daily newspaper… no computer network will change the way government works. We’re promised instant catalog shopping — just point and click for great deals. We’ll order airline tickets over the network, make restaurant reservations and negotiate sales contracts. Stores will become obsolete. So how come my local mall does more business in an afternoon than the entire Internet handles in a month? Even if there were a trustworthy way to send money over the Internet — which there isn’t — the network is missing a most essential ingredient of capitalism: salespeople.

That’s what the ANA is saying: you need to prop up our outdated business model as an “essential ingredient” — or else capitalism will end. But actually we don’t, and it won’t.

The new gTLD program is not going to be undone. For that to happen would mean jettisoning 10 years of the ICANN experiment and all the work that has gone into it. Too many people, governments, and institutions have put in too much work, and have too much at stake for that to happen. If, on the basis of a lobbying campaign in the United States by some fearful people, a global consensus were overthrown, the splitting of the root is not far behind, and if that happens the results will be much worse for ANA and its members (and everyone else) than the introduction of new gTLDs.

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Comments

  • frederic guillemaut on 3:26 AM said:

    Anthony, you are right. These initiatives are just the confirmation that Icann outreach communication plan was efficient And I love the article from 1995 ! It says all.

  • [...] his latest posting on the Minds+Machines blog, Antony Van Couvering looks at the advertising and marketing industry’s opposition to new gTLDs… This opposition, largely coming from the US is notable for several reasons. One is that the [...]

  • [...] A: I just wrote a long blog post about the ANA and its efforts to torpedo the new gTLD program (see http://www.mindsandmachines.com/2011/11/new-gtlds-and-the-1/). It’s not going to happen, for a lot of reasons that I explain. I think Mr. Liodice is the [...]

  • [...] A: I just wrote a long blog post about the ANA and its efforts to torpedo the new gTLD program (see http://www.mindsandmachines.com/2011/11/new-gtlds-and-the-1/). It’s not going to happen, for a lot of reasons that I explain. I think Mr. Liodice is the [...]

  • [...] A: I just wrote a long blog post about the ANA and its efforts to torpedo the new gTLD program (see http://www.mindsandmachines.com/2011/11/new-gtlds-and-the-1/). It’s not going to happen, for a lot of reasons that I explain. I think Mr. Liodice is the [...]

  • NewTLD on 5:24 PM said:

    “The truth is no online database will replace your daily newspaper… no computer network will change the way government works.” – Hard to disagree sometimes

  • DAN on 12:39 PM said:

    “Priced at $100K per year. Simple as that.” – LOL

  • [...] The 1% of Americans who are not affected by Occupy Wall Street complaints according to Antony Van Couvering are complaining that introducing the global choice to gTLD’s will drive up competition and will cost them money.  ICANN is expecting to be sued in the future about this new gTLD program by the 1% in the future and they are fully prepared. ICANN believes that they can’t make everyone happy in this new internet system and has put aside money to be in court. There has been a lot of time and energy  and money invested in this program on a global scale that will make sure the new system will not fail or cause problems. To read further click here. [...]

  • John Brankovic on 3:45 PM said:

    Forward for the application process commencing on the 12th January.

    An expected outcome from the Senate meeting with outspoken but baseless criticism on one side and a robust defence of ICAAN’s position on the other.

    The application process for the new gTLD’s goes ahead as scheduled and without further timewasting

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