The return of the stealth tax
Published: 20 Dec 2004 13:55 GMT
Tom Bliley, a Republican from Virginia who chairs the House Commerce Committee, was just as critical. Bliley said ICANN's proposals "likely exceed the authority" of an organisation charged with ensuring the stability of the Internet.
Bliley said he was "greatly concerned" about the $1 per domain name fee and "the funding of a rather large $5.9m ICANN budget through such a fee." The next month, former president Bill Clinton's Commerce Department wrote a letter to ICANN advising it against the $1 charge. Faced with that kind of united opposition, ICANN backed down.
Bliley has since retired, but his successors in the Republican Party are at least as sceptical of higher taxes as they were when Clinton inhabited the Oval Office. Consider two examples from this month: Bush flatly rejected the idea of tax hikes to pay the cost of fixing Social Security and signed a law restricting municipalities from levying taxes on Internet access.
If official Washington starts to pay attention -- and some conservative groups already are raising an alarm -- ICANN's position may be less defensible than it was last time around. Between 2000 and 2003, ICANN's budget totaled between $5m and $7m.
But for the fiscal year ending in June 2004, the budget zoomed upwards to $8.3m. Then, for the current 2005 fiscal year, it nearly doubled to $15.8m. ICANN's current 75-cent levy would add millions more to that figure, and that's not even counting extending the fee to .com, .org and newer suffixes.
Some practical advice
Any organisation that oversees domain names must find a way to pay its bills, whether it's ICANN or some inchoate process involving the United Nations' International Telecommunications Union. Domain name holders probably will end up footing a large portion of that budget.
But ICANN's current process could be improved.
First, ICANN could revise how it lets the public know about new fees. A prominent posting on ICANN.org's home page would work. The 75-cent fee announcement was buried in a dense chunk of legalese on page 12 of a document titled a "draft RFP" -- ICANN didn't exactly draft a press release. Similarly, how many .com, .net and .org domain name owners know about ICANN's 25-cent annual domain fee that snuck in earlier this year? Adding the 75-cent levy brings ICANN's take to an even $1.
Second, how about considering more checks and balances? Neither VeriSign, a large registry, nor GoDaddy, a sizable registrar, objected to the 75-cent fee. Susan Crawford, a professor at Cardozo School of Law, correctly noted that "ICANN has enormous power" that is virtually unchecked when levying these sorts of fees.
Third, money that domain name holders are forced to cough up might be earmarked to pay for ICANN's core functions. For example, ICANN wants to funnel one-third of the 75-cent fee to "developing country stakeholders".
In practice, that means fees collected from .net owners are paying midlevel government bureaucrats in Africa and South America to show up at ICANN meetings held in posh retreats around the globe. No thanks. For that matter, how about line-by-line disclosure of ICANN's own travel budget: Does its president really need a $115,547 annual expense account?
However it works out, ICANN has a clear incentive to adopt common-sense guidelines. Otherwise it risks reliving the backlash it suffered in 1999.
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