Internet and e-mail policy and practice
including Notes on Internet E-mail


2015
Months
Feb

Click the comments link on any story to see comments or add your own.


Subscribe to this blog


RSS feed


Home :: ICANN


27 Feb 2015

With .APP, ICANN's auction piggy bank just got even bigger ICANN

ICANN reports that Google paid over $25 million for .APP in the February 25 domain auction. They were willing to bid $30M, but it's a second bid auction so that was just enough to beat out whoever the second highest bidder was. The auction proceeds piggy bank just nearly doubled from $34M to about $59M dollars, and ICANN still has no idea what to do with it. Since there are still a lot more domain conflicts yet to be resolved, some for likely high bid names like .SEARCH and .WEB, it still seems possible that the final haul could be as much as $100M.

One interesting idea I've heard is to use part of it to fund open source DNS projects. Put some amount in a trust earmarked for DNS code projects, and spend the income on stuff like upgraded DNS libraries. Earlier this month in Singapore people at the Universal Domain Acceptance session said that's still a problem, and one technically experienced participant pointed out that if they want better DNS software they could pay people to write it and give it away. So that's an obvious place to start, with benefits that would be much broader than the usual "bring people from poor countries to ICANN meetings" suggestions.

Note: Sorry for the screw up a few weeks ago about .BLOG. That was a private auction, with the proceeds going to the losing bidders. This was an ICANN "last resort" auction, and the proceeds less the auctioneer's fees all go to ICANN.


posted at: 16:15 :: permanent link to this entry :: 0 comments
posted at: 16:15 :: permanent link to this entry :: 0 comments

comments...        (Jump to the end to add your own comment)

Add your comment...

Note: all comments require an email address to send a confirmation to verify that it was posted by a person and not a spambot. The comment won't be visible until you click the link in the confirmation. Unless you check the box below, which almost nobody does, your email won't be displayed, and I won't use it for other purposes.

 
Name:
Email: you@wherever (required, for confirmation)
Title: (optional)
Comments:
Show my Email address
Save my Name and Email for next time

Topics


My other sites

Who is this guy?

Airline ticket info

Taughannock Networks

Other blogs

CAUCE
It turns out you don’t need a license to hunt for spam.
31 days ago

A keen grasp of the obvious
Italian Apple Cake
589 days ago

Related sites

Coalition Against Unsolicited Commercial E-mail

Network Abuse Clearinghouse



© 2005-2020 John R. Levine.
CAN SPAM address harvesting notice: the operator of this website will not give, sell, or otherwise transfer addresses maintained by this website to any other party for the purposes of initiating, or enabling others to initiate, electronic mail messages.