One or two PDPs?

Milton L Mueller mueller at SYR.EDU
Wed Jan 27 03:27:06 CET 2010


Avri wrote
> -----Original Message-----
> ICANN rules stipulate that all registries are treated
> equally, no matter what.
> 

I think you mean "all registrars." Yes, that is true now.

But allowing vertical integration means changing those rules. 

In a vertically integrated world, there are no "registries" and "registrars" as exist under the current contracts. There is an integrated provider.

Here is an example from a different industry that may clarify: telephone service. 

The old AT&T was vertically integrated. When you bought their local telephone service you got AT&T long distance service. You had no choice about which long distance carrier you got. AT&T local was "hardwired" to or bundled with AT&T long distance. 

When we broke up AT&T we eliminated vertical integration. That is, we separated local from long distance telephone companies, and regulators created an equal access interface so that all long distance companies could access the local exchange on equal terms. 

ICANN's (and the US Commerce Department's) separation of registry and registrar was based on that same regulatory philosophy. It eliminated a vertically integrated domain name seller and created a separation between registrars (retail) and registries (wholesale).  

Just as there are different legal and regulatory categories for Local Exchange Companies (LECs) and Interexchange companies (IXCs), so there are different contracts for Registries and Registrars. Allowing vertical integration means getting rid of that distinction. So it would no longer be true that "all registrars are treated equally." 

That is precisely why Vertical Integration is so controversial and important, and why a PDP changing policy toward it would take a long time. 


More information about the Ncuc-discuss mailing list