Follow-up to the EFF .ORG petition

You may remember, from over a month ago, there was circulation on WLUG email of a request to sign a petition<https://act.eff.org/action/help-stop-the-sale-of-public-interest-registry-to-a-private-equity-firm> of Electronic Frontier Foundation to "Help Stop the Sale of Public Interest Registry to a Private Equity Firm"... "This month [November 2019] it was suddenly announced that the nonprofit that owns the .ORG domain registry was planning to sell it to a private equity firm, Ethos Capital. This could impact the millions of individuals and organizations that have a .ORG website, subjecting them to potential censorship and leaving the door open for price increases on domain registration and renewals." You may be wondering what happened. I've just looked at the wikipedia entry for .ORG, and it contains the following paragraph based on this article from the The Verge<https://www.theverge.com/2020/4/30/21241946/icann-dot-org-isoc-ethos-capital-sale-rejected>: "In November 2019, the Public Interest Registry (PIR) was to be sold by the Internet Society to shell company Ethos Capital for US$1.135 billion. The PIR also announced it would abandon its non-profit status to become a B Corporation. However, this move was criticized by non-profits and various digital rights groups on concerns that Ethos Capital, a private equity firm, would raise fees or censor the domain. The sale was blocked by Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) in April 2020 on the basis that transfer of control of the domain to the private equity firm would create "unacceptable uncertainty" for non-profits that relied on the .org domain." While Wikipedia's entry on .ORG<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.org> has a brief history section, more details can be found at Wikipedias Public Interest Registry webpage<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Interest_Registry>. In case you find its TL;DR here are some snippets... the Internet Society proposed creating the Public Interest Registry as a separate 501(c)3 non-profit to manage .ORG when the Public Interest Registry was established, “our aim was to promote the non-commercial use of the internet" Public Interest Registry released an open letter on 1 May 2019, stating, “The .ORG Community always is considered in every decision we make here at Public Interest Registry. Rest assured, we will not raise prices unreasonably. In fact, we currently have no specific plans for any price increases for .ORG.” On 13 May 2019, ICANN announced that they would remove the price cap on .ORG registrations. ...former ICANN CEO Fadi Chehadé registered the domain name EthosCapital.com. On 14 May 2019, Ethos Capital was incorporated in Delaware On 13 November 2019 the Internet Society announced that it was divesting of the Public Interest Registry, and that Ethos Capital would be acquiring its assets Ethos Capital stated on their website, "Our plan is to live within the spirit of historic practice when it comes to pricing," which they later clarified to mean raising prices by an average of 10% per year. People who came out in opposition to the sale included Tim Berners-Lee... On 29 November 2019, it was revealed that the purchase price is $1.135 billion. On 30 April 2020, the ICANN Board, saying it was "the right thing to do," withheld its consent to the transfer of control of the Public Internet Registry to Ethos Capital, effectively killing the proposed deal. In Summary The .ORG remains in the hands of the "Public Interest Registry" which seems to sometimes get called the "Public Internet Registry"? The "Public Interest Registry" pir.org link takes you to https://thenew.org/org-people/ where, among other things, you can download the PIR 2018 Annual Report<https://thenew.org/app/uploads/2019/09/PIR-2018-Annual-Report.pdf> or their 2018 Form 990<https://thenew.org/app/uploads/2019/09/PIR-2017_2018-990.zip> "Return of Organization Exempt From Tax". For 2018 you will see their total revenue was $93 million. cheers, Ian.
participants (1)
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Ian Stewart