• Friday, June 12, 2026

The ICANN86 Policy Forum in Seville brought the global Internet governance community together to focus on practical, operational, and policy issues shaping the future of the DNS. For the ccTLD ecosystem, the discussions were less about structural expansion and more about strengthening the stability, security, and usability of country-code domains worldwide.

1. DNS Abuse Mitigation Moving Toward Policy Requirements

 A major concrete theme at ICANN86 was the ongoing GNSO Policy Development Process (PDP) on DNS Abuse Mitigation, which is actively working on defining clearer expectations for contracted parties.

Key direction discussed:

  • When registrars are expected to conduct associated domain checks for malicious registrations
  • Moving from voluntary best practices toward more structured policy expectations
  • Coordination between contract enforcement and technical mitigation efforts
  • This signals a shift from “best effort” to more defined responsibilities in parts of the DNS ecosystem. 

2. Registration Data Access (SSAD / Next-Gen Access Models)

Discussions continued on improving access to non-public registration data through evolving models such as SSAD (System for Standardized Access and Disclosure).

Key issues:

  • Making disclosure requests more predictable and auditable
  • Balancing GDPR-style privacy requirements with law enforcement needs
  • Improving consistency across registries and registrars
  • This remains a central tension point in the post-WHOIS environment.

3. DNS Abuse + AI as a Cross-Community Priority

ICANN86 plenary planning highlighted a focused session on:

  • The impact of Artificial Intelligence on DNS abuse
  • How AI is changing phishing, domain generation, and detection methods
  • This reflects a shift toward anticipating next-generation abuse patterns, not just reacting to existing ones.

4. ccNSO Sessions: Operational Resilience and Real Registry Challenges

The ccNSO agenda at ICANN86 was strongly operational in nature, including:

  • Tech Day sessions focused on registry security and DNS operations
  • Discussions on DNS resilience and regulatory impacts on ccTLD operations
  • Work on IANA-related ccTLD disaster recovery and public records
  • Case-study sharing through ccTLD News sessions

These are practical operator-focused discussions rather than high-level policy theory.

5. Root System & Security Stability Work (SSAC / RSSAC Interface)

Technical advisory discussions included:

  • Root server system expectations and operational procedures
  • Joint sessions on DNS security, stability, and resilience (SSR)
  • Continued emphasis on incident coordination across the DNS infrastructure layer
  • This reinforces that ccTLD stability is tightly linked to root and resolver ecosystem resilience.

6. Universal Acceptance & IDNs as Deployment Problems (Not Just Policy)

  •  Unlike earlier phases, UA and IDN discussions at ICANN86 were framed around real-world deployment gaps, not concept validation:
  • Enterprise and government systems still failing to support valid domain formats
  • Fragmentation in software behavior across scripts and languages
  • Continued focus on enabling multilingual Internet usability at scale

Closing Perspective

ICANN86 made one thing clear for the ccTLD community: the work is increasingly operational and implementation-heavy.

  • Rather than new structural debates, the focus is shifting toward:
  • enforceable DNS abuse policy,
  • practical registration data access mechanisms,
  • and real-world deployment of a multilingual, resilient DNS.

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