Interesting.. not an expert on this stuff though.
Need some guys who know this well to chime in..
I will look at the link you gave me a little later though.
It is a confusing. This is what ICANN likes.
IANA is a contract between ICANN and the US Government to handle IP allocation and all the domain extensions. This includes .COM, .NET, .ORG, and ccTLDS as well as new gTLDs.
Since the NTIA and DoC created the IANA and ICANN they have ultimate control over them. Going fwd ICANN wants to be a completely private entity without any US Government control. While this sounds like a good idea it isn't. ICANN claims to to take comments from the public because we've seen registries try to raise prices.
Currently the wholesale .COM price is frozen because the DoC stepped in and prevented Verisign from raising it. Technically the .COM and .NET contract are supposed to come up for competitive bidding. ICANN put into the contract an automatic renewal with the .COM and .NET operated Verisgn. Plenty of companies can operate the zone files and root servers. Google, Amazon, IBM, Softlayer, etc. would likely be bidding.
ICANN doesn't allow any freemarket competition and isn't a "non profit" as they claim.
Btw .ORG prices are increasing next month by $1. No reason for the increase PIR, .ORG registry, just wants to make more money.
Ted Cruz is spearheading efforts to stop the transition.
https://youtu.be/IrWHeVy003chttps://www.cruz.senate.gov/?p=press_release&id=2730https://www.cruz.senate.gov/?p=press_release&id=2677Here is some more info.
https://www.ntia.doc.gov/press-release/2016/iana-stewardship-transition-proposal-meets-criteria-complete-privatizationPerhaps someone else wants to chime in?