Tucows 2014 Annual Report Download - page 54

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the U.S. or any other government may reassess its decision to introduce competition into, or ICANN’s role in
overseeing, the domain registration market;
the Internet community or the U.S. Department of Commerce or U.S. Congress may refuse to recognize
ICANN’s authority or support its policies, which could create instability in the domain registration system;
some of ICANN’s policies and practices, and the policies and practices adopted by registries and registrars,
could be found to conflict with the laws of one or more jurisdictions;
ICANN may lose any one of the several claims pending against it in both the U.S. and international courts, in
which case its credibility may suffer and its policies may be discredited;
the terms of the Registrar Accreditation Agreement (the “RAA”), under which we are accredited as a registrar,
could change in ways that are disadvantageous to us or under certain circumstances could be terminated by
ICANN preventing us from operating our Registrar, or ICANN could adopt unilateral changes to the RAA that
are unfavorable to us, that are inconsistent with our current or future plans, or that affect our competitive
position;
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