 Because ICANN was such an unusual organization and there was unprecedented in a kind of way, what was the greatest challenge in trying to build this organization? Well again, the challenges were multiple, but let me take you back a little bit. The board was selected with the exception of June Marai to be people who were not active in this broad community. They weren't registries, registrars. They were not supposed to be people who had been part of some partisan discussion beforehand. And so I was part of the internet community, but I wasn't a partisan. Most of the rest of them really were not internet people at all. They didn't use the internet. Trying to get a board that people felt knew something was one challenge. The whole thing with network solutions was another challenge because they were trying to just delegitimize us totally. We were short of budget. The guy who represented the internet, John Pastel, had died. When you list the problems like that, it sounds like it's almost, it was against all odds that ICANN succeeded. Well, no, it was against a bunch of odds, but at the same time it was clear that something like that needed to exist.