The United States Government has said it has no intention of giving up its oversight role of the authoritative root zone file, the file that stores the database of how domain names are reached on the internet.
The notification comes in a letter from the Department of Commerce's
National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) that
says the NTIA is "not in discussions with either party to change the
respective roles of the Department, ICANN or VeriSign regarding the
management of the authoritative root zone file, nor do we have any
plans to undertake such discussions." So as the NTIA says, it "has no
plans to transition management of the authoritative root zone file to
ICANN as suggested in the PSC documents."
The letter describes the relationship between the NTIA and ICANN as
"defined by two distinct legal arrangements: A Joint Project Agreement
(JPA), which is a continuation of a series of agreements between the
Department and ICANN to facilitate the transition of the technical
coordination of the management functions related to the Internet domain
name and addressing system (DNS) to the private sector; and a contract
to perform the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) functions.
Both agreements are administered by the National Telecommunications and
Information Administration (NTIA) on behalf of the Department."
The change is nothing other than what was expected, but it will not be
something that is overly pleasing countries such as Brazil and China
who have been agitating for a more international body to take over the
role of ICANN, originally possibly under the auspices of a United
Nations body.
To read a more detailed posting on the letter on IP Watch, see ip-watch.org/weblog/index.php?p=1185. The letter from the NTIA to ICANN is available from www.ntia.doc.gov/comments/2008/ICANN_080730.html.



