Inside the billion-dollar battle over .Org
Two
months ago, Ethos Capital, a private equity firm, announced that it
planned to buy the rights to a tract of internet
real estate
for more than $1 billion.
But
it wasn’t just any piece of digital property. It was dot-org, the
cyber neighborhood that is home to big nonprofits and nongovernmental
organizations like the United Nations (un.org) and NPR (npr.org), and
to little ones like neighborhood clubs.
The
deal was met with a fierce backlash. Critics argued that a less
commercial corner of the internet should not be controlled by a
profit-driven private equity firm, as a matter of both principle and
practice. Online petitions and letters of concern came from hundreds
of organizations, thousands of individuals and four Democrats in
Congress, including Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts.
Rarely
has the acronym-strewn realm of internet addresses — so-called
domain names — stirred such passion.
Now,
a group of respected internet pioneers and nonprofit leaders is
offering an alternative to Ethos Capital’s bid: a nonprofit
cooperative corporation. The incorporation papers for the new entity,
the Cooperative Corporation of .ORG Registrants, were filed this week
in California. Read
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