Title: ICANN Violating Free Enterprise Word Count: 597 Summary: Message to ICANN: Let those who want to create a tld, simply register it with ICANN. Keywords: ICANN,DNSO,GNSO,IANA,Domain,Business,website,name,internet,net,web,tld,namespace,com,biz,net,aero,info,trademark,tm,WIPO,conflict,arbitration,monopoly,anti-trust,government,affiliate,website,design Article Body: Message to ICANN: Let those who want to create a tld, simply register it with ICANN. If the tld is not already taken, if they have the technical capability to mange the tld, and they have the desire to market domain names on that tld, then let them do so. It should be similar to the registering of a domain name, except on a higher level, with the added technical requirements. ICANN should be sort of an uber-registry for tlds. It would be ludicrous for a domain name restrar like go daddy or enom to ask you for a business plan, or a non-refundable application fee, before allowing you to register a domain name. It would be ridiculous for a registrar to have "rounds" of domain name releases of names "they chose" in advance. Okay, this month, go daddy will be allocating cheaperwebhosting.com, doggrommingmadeeasy.net, and virtualinternetwebnetwork.net. We will be taking applications and public comment during the month of february. We will then spend another month reviewing the applicants business plans to decide who we will allocate the domain name to. If you are not approved to manage the domain name you apply for, your application fee will be held by go daddy until further notice. Some people will say that is not a good analogy, but it is a perfect analogy. Here is why. If info.com was still available and I registered it. I could then start selling subdomains like car.info.com, computer.info.com, icann.info.com or any other subdomain someone wished to purchase from me. The subdomain is one dot removed from the domain name the same as the domain name is one dot removed from the tld. There is no longer any reason to believe ICANN is doing anything other than restricting free enterprise and free trade by not opening up the market for tlds. It is no longer acceptable that ICANN should be the one to decide which tlds will or will not be created nor is it acceptable that ICANN gets to choose who can or cannot run a tld. Do you present a businesss plan to the city you live in before they allow you a business license? No. Does the city ask you to prove you are financially stable before issuing you a business license? No, as long as you pay the registration fee. If you apply for a business license to open a clothing store, does the city ask how you will run your clothing store or if you have the necessary expertise to run a clothing store? No. Does the city think you will hurt them economically if your clothing store goes out of business? No, it's none of their business. Is the city concerned that there may not enough demand for yet another clothing store? No, again none of their business. ICANN not allowing me, or anyone else in the world, to create a tld of our choice in any language we choose, is a blatant violation of our rights. In many countries, America among them, the right to free enterprise still exists. ICANN is denying me that right as an American citizen and doing so when even their own organization exists under American law. There are no needs for auctions or rounds or anything else. If you want to run a tld, then you register it and start selling domain names. If you fail, you fail, just as in any other business venture you take on. Artificially restricting namespace to make a few business IP interests happy has to stop.