James.Ryan on 30 Oct 2000 18:12:26 -0000 |
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Re: <nettime> vote action |
>the technical and bureaucratic implementation of the vote. two good >(user-nominated) candidates won, auerbach and mueller-maguhn; the rest >are just a bunch of sops and yes-men, one of whom--the asian rep who >lives in the US--believes that ICANN is a model for twnety-first >century governance. As a resident of New Zealand, I voted in the Asia Pacific region. Though I nominated all the candidates who openly supported equal rights over domain names to noncommercial interests, I was disappointed that only two or three made it through the nomination. In particular, there was a woman from Japan who made open statements in her profile that she believed the Internet was being taken over by commercial interests and that the current domain name administration system was biased towards profit-making enterprises. She vowed to "level the playing field." Despite the fact that she had the most nominations when I cast my vote two days before the deadline, she mysteriously was not on the ballot. Since her link is now gone, I don't even remember her name. While I voted for Sureswaran Ramadas, who wanted ICANN to concentrate more on equal access for poorer nations, nonprofits, etc. I nearly vomited when the "yes man" that Ted describes won the vote. If you have recently eaten some rancid meat and have sudden need to retch the contents of your stomach, follow http://members.icann.org/cand/196.html I am sure that he won simply because most people either didn't have the time to read all the profiles or just didn't have any particular stance one way or another and just voted for their country. Japan has by far the largest Internet population in Asia, and the largest at-large membership in ICANN. I know you can't agree to participate and then complain about the rules after you've lost, but this first experience was pretty bitter. I wonder if ICANN will ever open up its records so that we can see why some nominees that were doing well suddenly vanished? Also, what is the policy on residing in the region you represent? It seems unfair that Asia Pacific is represented by a guy living in Washington DC who proclaims openly that he "may be viewed as a representative of business and to some extent the intellectual property group." AARGH!!!! Is there any way to make ICANN irrelevant? (this is just a cry of despair, but if anyone really wants to try and answer.....) -jr t byfield <tbyfield@panix.com> Sent by: nettime-l-request@bbs.thing.net 2000/10/27 13:21 Please respond to t byfield To: nettime-l@bbs.thing.net cc: Subject: Re: <nettime> vote action pit@klubradio.de (Thu 10/26/00 at 09:46 AM +0200): > {piggyback on} <...> # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net