Translations:ICANN/23/en

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Once again, these responsibilities would be undertaken and guided by the principles of stability, competition, private bottom-up coordination, and representation.[1] The agreement established ICANN as an entity that would encourage transparency in its dealings and would create ample room for appeals for any binding decisions it would make. The Department of Commerce later noted that it was comfortable ceding its control to ICANN, as it seemed like the best step towards true privatization while still binding the authority of the institution to the American policies found within the MoU.[2] The original agreement was set with an expiration of September 30th, 2000.[1] The MoU has been amended several times.

  1. 1.0 1.1 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named icann-mou
  2. Congressional Hearing.Published 1999 July.