The non-profit organisation @ICANN, that controls the central backbone of the internet (the root-servers) and has a monopoly on letting registrars (think godaddy) resell .com/.net/.org/etc domains, denied my application to become a registrar. A thread.
Since 2019 I've had an active application with ICANN. They're famous for being a bureaucratic nightmare to deal with, so I expected a long process. It got delayed by the passing of my mom last year and by covid. That's understandable.
By becoming accredited by ICANN you have the possibility to make direct deals with the organisations that run certain top level domains (.COM .NET .ORG etc). ICANN only accredits you, gives you an accreditation ID and you make the deal with each organisation separately.
Without an accreditation by ICANN, you can't make that deal, except with ccTLDs - top level domains that belong to countries (think 2 letter TLDs, .DE .FI .NO .SE) that are independent from ICANN oversight.
Any toplevel domain that is not 2-letters requires ICANN accreditation. From .GAY to .MOBI to .BLACKFRIDAY. Without ICANN accepting you, you can't make a deal with another party. So, a monopoly.
ICANN runs the root-servers as well. They're the DNS servers that make sure that we can find eachother on the internet. They're like the phonebook of the internet. They required (basically) to translate WHATEVER.COM to an IP and thus reaching it's intended audience.
ICANN is a non-profit corporation based in the US. The US governement decided to transfer the infrastructure control to another party, based in the US. The rest of the world has no say in reality, but we're all depending on it.
So short recap here: ICANN accreditation is mandatory for a business to resell 95% of all domain names. ICANN is a corporation in the US. I have for decades worked against a centralised structure, publicly voiced my concern about these structures (from DNS to social media).
ICANN is quite slow at replying to emails regarding the accreditation. We've emailed, a lot, regarding the TOS that I proposed for my organisation. We've made the changes in coordinance with them and a local lawyer to make the TOS fit with local regulation and ICANN requirements.
For me this accreditation has been important to make sure that we can have more flexibility in working with domain names, offer better privacy for our services (like DNSSEC for certain domains that is not implemented with our current middle men).
But most importantly, I have for years worked within organisations as well as outside in order to raise my voice and concern about the structures. I don't always believe in working from within a system, but I'm also pragmatic - I can do both. I always raise my voice.
After the first final review of our application, ICANN made a background check of everyone involved in the application (we're a team). My first contacts with ICANN I've been very open with who I am - I mentioned they should google me. My background is.. let's say different.
I'm well-known in the internet industry, and especially in the domain name industry, for everything going on with The Pirate Bay, and also for the past years working with @njal_la that has pissed a lot of people in the industry off. Njalla does nothing illegal nor even immoral.
After the background check I get a reply that I've "checked the wrong boxes" on parts of the application. There's some boxes saying: (paraphrasing) "have anyone in the team being convicted of fraud or similar in the past 10 years".
Noone in the team has been convicted of that. Nor murder, manslaughter, theft, breaking & entering, or anything else. I was involved in a case of aiding with copyright infringement from 2005-2006. That's 15+ years ago. And not fraud or similar.
In fact, in the past 15 years I've actually worked in a company that was under the inspection of the UK Financial Conduct Authority. No problems. No issues. If I was convicted of fraud or similar, that would have raised concerns, let me tell you that.
However, @ICANN is of another opinion. After spending over half a year to review the application (with a bi-weekly email stating that the delay is normal, nothing to be concerned about), they decided to deny the application since "the wrong box was ticked".
Not only that, but they're also upset I was wanted by Interpol. They both claim that I've lied on the application (!) and also that I also admitted that I was wanted by interpol. I got a bit confused. I should also add that being wanted by interpol in itself is not a crime.
The background of that is that I simply didn't feel like getting locked up. It's also not a crime to refuse. There's no penalty. Being sentenced to prison in Sweden means the government has an obligation to put you in prison. You have no legal obligation to help. So I didn't.
I understand that I might be weird. I might be annoying. I might be a handful. I might be demanding. I might care too much about an open and decentralised internet. Honestly, skip the "might be"; I simply am.
For years and years I've been problematic. 11 years ago I openly talked about making a Peer 2 peer DNS system. The title of one article from 2010 says "Fed up with ICANN" arstechnica.com/tech-policy/20…
One of the most censored website in the world is The Pirate Bay. The site I was involved in has lost lots of domains. ICANN has always found it problematic. They've been annoyed. They are annoyed. I've always stood my ground on the other side.
One time I woke up and found an e-mail. A guy had registered ifpi.com - ifpi being the international record companies organisation. They've forgot to renew the domain so he registered it. Then he transferred it in to my name as a (quite funny) joke.
Ifpi took it to something called a UDRP, a way to figure out who has the rights to a certain domain name. This is mostly arbitration run by WIPO. Yes, World Intellectual Property Organization. My not so best friends.
WIPO stated they didn't really believe me that I got the domain from someone else, since ifpi.com all of a sudden was "internetional federation of pirates interests" instead of the other organisation. I laughed, because well, honestly, I would have hosted itmyself.
WIPO has been quite upset with me personally. Ifpi too. Ifpi also happens to be "Accredited Observers" with WIPO. I never got invited to any arbitration, I just sent in an e-mail explaining that I got the domain and it was funny. I would have taken credit if I was smart enough.
I've had lots and lots of domains suspended for dubious reasons. Not only The Pirate Bay. And friends of mine have had domains suspended, and important organisations I've worked with. Wikileaks famously lost their domain when we hosted them.
So, for me it's been of utmost importance to become a member of the club here - ICANN is a monopoly, they hang out with their friends in their trusted circles. So of course, I should be allowed to join. I have fulfilled all their criteria, and worked in good faith with them.
Instead they're saying I'm a liar and also not welcome. They ended their denial with saying that they also reserve the right to deny anyone for any reason, and they don't have to disclose it. This is the monopoly I've been upset about for decades. And they just proved it again.
I even e-mailed Göran Marby, the CEO of ICANN, asking him to look into it. We have mutual friends. He said he'd look into it and then he stopped replying to my e-mails. All my e-mails has been curtious and transparent with all my intentions and goals.
I've emailed, added people on Skype. I've even used that old technology of normal phones to call their office. We're 10 hours difference from eachother. I've been up at night. They never call back, they don't email back.
Now, ICANN also publicly brags about how they're important and have influence over the global internet. They brag about having people from all backgrounds involved in their organisation. They do not however have someone who wants to change from inside.
I'm not after destroying @ICANN. What I'm after is actually pushing them to become a democratic institution. I've many times publicly stated that I wish for them to be controlled by more than just the US government - it's a democratic requirement.
It's one of few organisations I see that is not needed to blow up. They've previously done good things. Lately; less so. They have old CEOs and bosses that has been opting for removing the price limit on .ORG only to all of a sudden work for a company that wants to buy .ORG.
There's been a lot of corruption from within this organisation lately. I want to clean it up. I have no illusion of us as people to be able to take back control from ICANN, so the only pragmatic way is to be inside this system and patch the leaks until we can find an alternative.
Now, I am 42 years old. When I did TPB i was in my early 20s. According to their requirements, if I was a murderer I would have been accepted, even if I killed someone recently.
Obviously the denial of my application is that of a dislike of me as an individual. Since the organisation is depending on ICANN accreditation to serve a purpose, the only thing I can do now is to quit, and leave the board. So that my co-workers are not affected.
Hopefully ICANN will accept them, but most likely they won't believe that I'm not involved, just like they said it was more likely I lied about the ifpi domain than just millions of people hating ifpi and loving freedom of information. A dangerous view for those who run internet.

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More from @brokep

Jan 28, 2023
Är skatten för hög? Absolut! Jag är vänster så det skriker om det men håller med. En sån här tråd kommer nu.
Många människor har allt för låg lön. Hade vi haft lägre skatt kunde de klarat sig bättre. Jobben borde såklart betala mer men varje källa till mer pengar är mer pengar.
Problemet är i grund och botten att pengarna läggs på fel saker. Styrningen som sker är korkad. Staten, regioner och kommuner måste trimma ner onödiga kostnader!
Read 19 tweets
Sep 15, 2022
Sverigedemokraterna kommer inte vilja sitta i regering. De hotar om det för att få än bättre förhandlingsläge. De vill kunna ha makt och inflytande men inget ansvar.
Dessutom fattar de att de måste gå långsamt framåt. Just nu är alla oroliga för vad som kommer hända. Förändringar kommer ske gradvis så majoriteten upplever det som ofarligt. Samtidigt ligger en rädsla kvar som kommer få många motståndare att själva dra sig undan.
Självcensuren finns redan i medierna. Anna hedenmo framstår som direkt rädd för att göra "fel" gällande SD - en hänsyn man sällan ser gällande andra partier. Särbehandlingen leder än mer till att få SD att se rumsrena ut.
Read 17 tweets
Oct 28, 2021
Deeply disappointed in @ProtonMail lately. I have been really glad about their existence, and have even tried to stay positive with the later issues, but turns out they sent @njal_la a demand for getting private user data, because someone wrote about them badly.
I won't go into detail about the registrant. Proton might even be right that the post is partly incorrect. However, the posts are on a private blog, it's quite obvious personal views from a guy that is a bit not happy with Proton. I can understand that it's annoying for Proton.
However, few people would take that blog serious. It's not Wired or The Guardian writing these things. The Streisand effect should be their biggest worry. There are thousands of incorrect articles about me and my projects out there -- I'm not going after them with legal counsel.
Read 14 tweets
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So, @ProtonMail had to give out information about one of their users. Navigating what has happened is a bit tricky, and I'm not going to complain about the fact that Proton handed out the data. Why? Thread.
First of all, Proton is (probably) not storing people's IP addresses. From what I understand, they have been ordered by authorities to turn on IP logging. That the suspects are a group of youth climate activists is not something Proton can use as a basis to refuse.
Most likely they didn't even know it was a group of youth activists to begin with. Hopefully not - that would mean that they do have more information than they claim on their users. I trust @ProtonMail, and this situation has not changed that.
Read 13 tweets
May 3, 2021
Maybe you heard that the domain dark.fail (@DarkDotFail ) got hijacked. Here's the story on how it happened. A thread! (I've pieced together the data I have so I might have some small errors in this thread, FYI.)
First, the domain was registered through a service I started, @njal_la (or transferred in, not sure here). Njalla in turn uses @tucows as a registrar for .FAIL domains.
On the 28th of April, Tucows receives a court order, from Amtsgericht Köln, the district court of Cologne, NRW, Germany. It contains a list of domain names that they want handed over. Two of three domains listed are registered through Njalla, the last one with @hover.
Read 35 tweets
Mar 1, 2021
A small update to this. The day after my twitter thread about @ICANN I finally got a reply to one of my many e-mails. Quote: "I apologize for our delay in getting back to you" (aka: Thanks for retweeting). And today we had a voice chat about the application. Another thread!
I got some sort of semi-excuse regarding their claim that I lied on my application. They also said that they agreed it wasn't fraud or similar really. So both of the points they made regarding the denial was not really the reason.
However, @ICANN says that IP infringement is as serious to them as fraud. Fraud that happened 10+ years ago is not as serious as potentially aiding with IP infringements that happened 15+ years ago though. Because turns out I'm actually banned from doing business with ICANN.
Read 20 tweets

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