Board of Trustees
2003 Board Election
Candidates
Candidate Profile: Takashi Arano
Senior Managing Director, CTO, Intec
NetCore, Inc.
Takashi Arano received Master of Science from the University
of Tokyo. Since 1996, he had lead NTT's Internet department
as a chief engineer. He designed an initial network of OCN,
which is now one of the biggest Internet providers in Japan.
He was also involved in a wide range of strategic planning
from peering to M&A. He has joined Intec NetCore since
June, 2002.
He has contributed to the Internet community in various ways.
<Address Policy area>
ICANN ASO Address Council (1999-)
Chair of APNIC Address Policy SIG (2000-)
Board member of JPNIC(2002-), etc.
He has played a key role in address policy area in Asia Pacific
in a process of forming true bottom-up policy development
scheme. Recently, he devoted himself to making global consensus
on the new IPv6 address policy which he originally proposed.
He contributed an article regarding this to "ISOC Member
Briefing".
<IPv6 Promotion>
Board member of the IPv6 Forum (2001-)
Program Chair of the first Global IPv6 Summit in Asia Pacific(2003)
Chair of IPv6 Deployment Committee of Internet Association
Japan(2000-)
co-Chair of International Strategic group of IPv6 Promotion
Council of Japan(2001-)
Chair of Steering Group of Global IPv6 Summit in Japan (2000-)
Chair of Editorial committee of the IPv6 Magazine of Impress,
Ltd.(2001-)
Some Japanese governmental committee members, etc.
He has spent a lot of time for promoting IPv6 domestically
and globally. Giving speeches in Global IPv6 Summits in many
countries, he has introduced Japanese experiences and enlightened
people towards IPv6.
<Other area>
Regarding the Y2K problem, he took the lead for preparing
the year 2000 as the chair of Y2K Coordination Center Japan
under Internet Association of Japan. It was coordinated with
other Y2K organizations globally.
- A statement of your interests, your concerns about the
Internet
Society, your goals as a Trustee and your motivation to serve
as a Trustee.
I believe that IPv6 will be a future infrastructure on which
various applications will run with not only PCs/PDAs but also
many other equipments (home appliances, automobiles, buildings,
office equipments, etc.) . A point is that this next generation
infrastructure must be a "fusion of everything".
To transit to this infrastructure, besides some technical
breakthrough, we the Internet industry must collaborate with
other industries, and make various consensus among them as
well as inside ourselves.
However, transition will be difficult. One of the most important
things to consider then is how technologies can make people
happy. We should discuss both technical and societal issues
and find out a good balance between them.
I believe ISOC should be the right place to discuss, act,
and review these issues and this is why I would like to contribute
to it.
Additional information: http://www.apnic.net/meetings/14/ac/nominees/arano.html
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