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Monday, 9 October, 2000, 16:23 GMT 17:23 UK - Voting ends on Tuesday in the
first worldwide online election of the web's ruling body.

Since the start of October, net users around the world have been voting to
elect five new members of the board of Icann - the Internet Corporation for
Assigned Names and Numbers.

One of the first tasks facing the board members will be to pick new
top-level domain names to complement the suffixes used by websites now,
such as .com and .org.

Despite criticism of the election, Icann is planning to do it all again in
November to find the last four members of its board.

Electronic election

The election is being run in an attempt to make Icann more representative
of the web at large.

Icann was created in October 1998 as a neutral body to take over many of
the administrative and technical tasks previously carried out by
organisations under contract to the US Government.

The change was supposed to reflect the fact that the internet is now much
more than just a plaything for American citizens.

So, in a bid to make itself more representative, Icann has been running an
election to find five new directors for its 19-strong board. Some board
members have already been chosen by net service providers and networking
companies.

Name claims

Each geographical region, Africa, Asia/Australia/Pacific, Europe, Latin
America/Caribbean, and North America, will get one representative.

The final four board members, who will sit on Icann technical committees,
will be elected in November.

One of the jobs for the directors is sifting applications for new domain
names. Icann released a list of which companies have applied to run which
new domain names in early October.

The directors face a tricky task as many of those applying to run new
domains want to claim the same name.

Election coverage

To vote for a candidate, interested web surfers had to register on the
Icann website and respond before 8 September with an identification number
sent to them in the post.

Icann was expecting about 5,000 people to register. However, almost 160,000
people registered an initial interest in voting. Just over 76,000 managed
to negotiate the registration procedure.

Icann has been criticised for the way that it is running the election by
organisations such as Icann Watch and the Centre for Democracy and Technology.

Both said the election was biased towards wealthier countries and wasted
the chance to create a truly representative electorate.

The election got more coverage in some countries than others. Many German
newspapers have written about Icann and one of the favourites to be elected
is Andreas Müller-Maguhn, a spokesman for a German hacker group called the
Chaos Computer Club.


Related to this story:
Money for nothing (19 Sep 00 | Sci/Tech)
Paying for the net name (04 Aug 00 | Sci/Tech)
Go-ahead for new web names (16 Jul 00 | Sci/Tech)
Net groups in world wide wrangle (04 Jul 00 | Sci/Tech)
Dot.com registrar sold for $21bn (07 Mar 00 | Business)

By BBC News Online internet reporter Mark Ward
BBC News Online: Sci/Tech
http://news.bbc.co.uk/low/english/sci/tech/newsid_963000/963657.stm

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