Executive Committee
Meeting Minutes 02-006
ISOC Document
Title: Minutes of Conference Call of ExComm, ISOC Board of Trustees
Attendees: Lynn StAmour Fred Baker Latif Ladid Christian Huitema Glenn Ricart Terry Weigler Toshio Mikki Rosa Delgado
Excused:
Kees Neggers
Date: 2002.07.15
Committee: Executive Committee of BoT
Document: excom-02-006
Revision:
Supersedes:
Status:
Maintainer: Minutes taken by Christian Huitema. Access: Unconfirmed
I. .ORG bid update
The news of our
bid for managing the .ORG domain has raised questions among some of
our members. One concern is that ISOC, which used to be above
the fray, will suddenly become one of the players; another concern
is that, if ISOC develop its own autonomous source of revenue, the control
of the society by its members will be looser. These concerns have been
expressed by some of our platinum members. Similar issues have been
raised by the IAB.
Lynn pointed out that these concerns can largely be alleviated through
the structure (a separate not-for-profit company) and the governance
model we intend to put in place. No revenues would accrue directly to
ISOC although donations could be made to the parent company (ISOC).
In addition the contributions of Platinum
members are used solely to support their chosen pillars/activities (and
today it's the RFC Editor in all cases ), without any overhead retained
by ISOC; providing the same funding to these destinations independently
of ISOC would in fact be less efficient. Lynn also confirms that the
society will remain financially solvent in the year to come but we need
to work to ensure we are more financially stable in the long-term.
ICANN has received 11 bids in total. Lynn received an e-mail mentioning
that the decision would be pushed out a couple of weeks; there is a
risk that it could be pushed even more. Regardless, we must prepare
the launching of the PIR organization. The sense of the executive committee
is that we must demonstrate early that our stewardship of .ORG will
be exemplary. We should set up an independent nomination committee to
select the directors of PIR; Lynn will kick-off a nomination process.
After, we have to organize some form of public workshop to get community
input on the best way to manage .ORG for the benefit of non-profit organizations,
in addition to the Advisory Council that PIR will establish if we are
successful in our bid.
II. 2002 financial
update
The staff expects
to be able to publish the financial statement in the 3rd week of every
month; this will not be the case for the June statements because of
vacations, but they expect to be strictly on schedule after that.
The cash on hand was 165K end of May, it's just over 4 weeks of operative
expenses; account payable 219K, including $110K not yet invoiced for
the RFC editor contract. We also expect to pay $71K to ExpoNova, as
a final settlement; we need to sign a final release with ExpoNova and
Key3Media, which bought ExpoNova. At the end of May, the surplus was
46K, as we received some past due member payments. The total surplus
is behind budget by 75K.
We used to receive a 10% management fee for the ThinkQuest program,
which was cancelled in February; we will thus receive 2-3K this year
on this program, instead of the expected 10K.
Education pillar showed a sizeable loss -- we don't expect any revenues
from INET.
According to Lynns reasonably conservative forecast, we are looking
at a year end P&L surplus of $50K.
III. Fundraising
committee update
Philippe, Latif
and Vint are trying to create a new fundraising model, moving from generic
fundraising to project selling or support. The societal side appears
to be ripe for new initiatives. We want ideas of new projects -- there
are certainly many that interest our members.
IV.Conference
We have mixed feelings
regarding the outcome of INET 2002; one positive aspect however is that
this conference helped us get new organization members. Lynn had a discussion
with Richard Perlman, regarding the potential organization of INET 2003,
and there is general agreement to not run another conference on the
same model as the previous INET, and certainly not in June 2003, as
the delay would be too short for proper organization. Brian suggested
holding a INET 2003 conference jointly with the World Summit on the
Information Society, WSIS, which would be held under the high patronage
of the UN Secretary-General, with ITU taking the role of the Executive
Secretariat, and with the participation of UN agencies, governments,
private sector, NGOs and civil society at-large. One possibility was
holding a few tracks at that conference 8-9, before the 10-12 December
2003, either at Palexpo or at the conference center in Geneva; the cost
would be very low, we might be able to offer it for free. But we need
to first understand whether this is the appropriate venue and event;
ISOC is already involved with WSIS as are numerous individual members.
Rosa mentions that the Swiss chapter is already involved, but that we
have to be very concerned with the accommodations; we would have to
choose clearly our focus.
V. Chapters update
The Internet Society
of China, which was created without approval from ISOC, is seeking to
establish some ties with us. There are multiple matters under discussion,
one of which is a request that the Taiwanese chapter change its designation
to some name that is politically acceptable by the PRC. Any discussion
should be
deferred to Fred or Lynn.
VI.Christine's
resignation
We just learned
that Christine Maxwell resigned from her position on the Board of Trustees.
Lynn will draft an appropriate announcement. The Executive Committee
thanks Christine for her efforts and wishes her all the best in her
new endeavors.
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