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Network Working Group ISOC Board of Trustees Request for Comments: 2135 ISOC Category: Informational April 1997

                      Internet Society By-Laws

Status of this Memo

 This memo provides information for the Internet community.  This memo
 does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of
 this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

 These are the by-laws of the Internet Society, as amended, as of June
 1996.  They are published for the information of the IETF community
 at the request of the poisson working group. Please refer to the ISOC
 web page (www.isoc.org) for the current version of the by-laws.

1. Internet Society By-Laws

ARTICLE I - OFFICES

 Section 1.
    The principal office of The Internet Society shall be in the Area
    of Metropolitan Washington, D.C., U.S.A.
 Section 2.
    The Society may also have offices at such other places as the
    Board of Trustees may from time to time determine or the affairs
    of the Society may require.

ARTICLE II - BOARD OF TRUSTEES

 Section 1.
    The Board of Trustees of the Society shall consist of not more
    than twenty Trustees unless and until such number is changed by
    action of the Board of Trustees. Each Trustee appointed or elected
    shall hold office for a term of three years, except when some
    shorter term is specified by the Board of Trustees with respect to
    the appointment or election of a particular Trustee. Only Regular
    Individual Members of the Society shall be eligible to serve on
    the Board of Trustees.
 Section 2.
    The Board of Trustees is authorised from time to time, to make
    arrangements for the election of voting Trustees by the Regular
    Individual Members of the Society (as defined in Article VI,
    Section 3, Clause (1), of these By-Laws), such that the total
    number of Trustees shall not exceed twenty.

ISOC Informational [Page 1] RFC 2135 ISOC By-Laws April 1997

    The President shall serve ex-officio as a non-voting Trustee.
    With the exception of the President, all Trustees shall be elected
    by the Regular Individual Members of the Society or shall be
    appointed by the Board to fill a vacancy which arises because an
    elected Trustee has ceased to serve.
    Any vacancy which arises because an elected or appointed Trustee
    has ceased to serve may be fill by appointment by the Board until
    a new Trustee is elected to fill this position for the remainder
    of the term, in an election of Trustees by the Regular Individual
    Members of the Society.
    All Trustees appointed by the Board shall be by the affirmative
    vote of at least four-fifths of the members of the Board of
    Trustees then in office.
    The Board shall seek to among the Trustees representative
    individuals from industry, from educational and nonprofit
    organisations and from government. The Board may also make such
    arrangements as it deems appropriate for the terms of Trustees to
    be staggered. A Trustee may serve additional terms provided that
    the number of successive terms shall not exceed two, except that
    service as an appointed Trustee prior to July 1995 shall not be
    counted in this computation.
 Section 3.
    All actions taken by the Board pursuant to Sections 1 and 2 of
    this Article II shall require the affirmative vote of at least
    four-fifths of the members of the Board of Trustees then in
    office.
 Section 4.
    The Trustees shall not receive any compensation (apart from
    reimbursement of expenses) for their services as Trustees, but
    this shall not preclude reasonable compensation for services
    rendered to the Society by a Trustee in some other capacity.
 Section 5.
    The affairs of the Society shall be directed by its Board of
    Trustees. The President of the Society shall submit to the Board,
    at least one month prior to the beginning of each fiscal year, a
    budget for the Society's coming fiscal year, for the Board's
    consideration and approval.
 Section 6.
    Meetings of the Board of Trustees shall be held at least annually
    and at any place designated by the Board.

ISOC Informational [Page 2] RFC 2135 ISOC By-Laws April 1997

 Section 7.
    Special meetings of the Board of Trustees may be called at any
    time by the Board, or by the Executive Committee if one be
    constituted, or by vote at a meeting of the Board, or by the
    Chairman, or by the President of the Society, or by a majority of
    the members of the Board of Trustees then in office. Special
    meetings may be held at such place or places as may be designated
    from time to time by the Board; in the absence of such
    designation, such meetings shall be held at such place or places
    as may be designated in the call.
 Section 8.
    Notice of the place and time of each meeting of the Board shall be
    served on each Trustee, by Internet mail or by oral, telegraphic
    or other written notice, duly served on or sent or mailed to him
    or her at least thirty days before the date of the meeting, except
    that if a meeting is held pursuant to Section 9 of this Article
    then seven calendar days notice shall suffice.
 Section 9.
    Any or all of the Trustees may participate in a meeting of the
    Board of Trustees, or of a committee of the Board, by means of
    conference telephone or by any means of electronic communication
    by which all persons participating in the meeting are able to
    communicate contemporaneously with one another, and such
    participation shall constitute presence in person at the meeting.
 Section 10.
    At all meetings of the Board, a majority of the voting members of
    the Board of Trustees then in office shall constitute a quorum for
    the transaction of business and the act of the majority of the
    Trustees present at any meeting at which a quorum is present shall
    be the act of the Board. However, with respect to any action for
    which, under the Society's Articles of Incorporation or By-Laws, a
    greater affirmative vote is expressly required, such express
    provisions shall control; and it is to be noted that such
    requirements are contained in Article 6 of the Articles of
    Incorporation relating to amendment of the Articles of
    Incorporation, and in these By-Laws in Article II, Sections 1, 2,
    3 and 13, relating to certain actions by the Board of Trustees,
    and in Article IV, Sections 1, 2, 3, 4 and 7, involving certain
    provisions relating to officers, and in Article VII, Section 1,
    relating to amendment of the By-Laws. If a quorum shall not be
    present at any meeting of the Board, the Trustees present thereat
    may adjourn the meeting from time to time, without notice other
    than announcement at the meeting, until a quorum shall be present.

ISOC Informational [Page 3] RFC 2135 ISOC By-Laws April 1997

 Section 11.
    Any action required to be taken at a meeting of the Board of
    Trustees, or any action which may be taken at a meeting of the
    Board of Trustees, may be taken without a meeting if a consent in
    writing, setting forth the action so taken, shall be obtained from
    all of the Trustees; and such consent shall have the same force
    and effect as a unanimous vote, and may be stated as such.
 Section 12.
    Actions of the Board of Trustees, whether taken at a meeting or
    otherwise, shall be duly recorded in minutes and retained in the
    Society's records.
 Section 13.
    The Board of Trustees, by resolution adopted by the affirmative
    vote of at least four-fifths of the members of the Board of
    Trustees then in office, may designate three or more Trustees to
    constitute an Executive Committee. The Executive Committee, to the
    extent provided in such resolution, shall have and may exercise
    all of the authority of the Board of Trustees in the management of
    the affairs of the Society (except for those matters which, under
    the Society's Articles of Incorporation or By-Laws, expressly
    require the affirmative vote of at least a majority, or more than
    a majority, of the members of the Board of Trustees then in
    office). The Executive Committee shall keep regular minutes of its
    proceedings and shall report the same to the full Board when
    required. The affirmative vote of a majority of the members of the
    Board of Trustees then in office may terminate the Executive
    Committee.
 Section 14.
    The Board of Trustees may establish such other Committees (other
    than an Executive Committee) as it deems appropriate to facilitate
    the activities of the Society, provided that no such Committee
    shall take actions reserved to the Board of Trustees or to the
    Executive Committee.

ARTICLE III - NOTICES

 Section 1.
    Whenever any notice whatever is required to be given, a waiver
    thereof in writing by the person or persons entitled to such
    notice, whether before or after the time stated therein, shall be
    deemed equivalent to the giving of such notice.

ISOC Informational [Page 4] RFC 2135 ISOC By-Laws April 1997

 Section 2.
    Attendance of a Trustee at a meeting shall constitute a waiver of
    notice of such meeting except where a Trustee attends a meeting
    for the express purpose of objecting to the transaction of any
    business because the meeting is not lawfully called or convened.
    Except as otherwise expressly required in the Society's Articles
    of Incorporation or By-Laws, neither the business to be transacted
    at, nor the purpose of, any regular or special meeting of the
    Board of Trustees need be specified in the notice or waiver of
    notice of such meeting.

ARTICLE IV - OFFICERS

 Section 1.
    The officers of the Society shall, at a minimum, consist of a
    Chairman, a President, a Treasurer and a Secretary, Except for the
    President, who shall be appointed as set forth in Section 4 below,
    each officer shall be elected for a one-year renewable term by the
    affirmative vote of at least a majority of the members of the
    Board of Trustees then in office. The Chairman shall be selected
    from among the members of the Board of Trustees who have been
    elected by the Regular Individual Members of the Society. A person
    shall not hold more than one office at a time.
 Section 2.
    Any vacancy in an officer position shall be filled by an
    individual elected by the affirmative vote of at least a majority
    of the members of the Board of Trustees then in office.
 Section 3.
    The Board of Trustees, by the affirmative vote of at least a
    majority of the members of the Board of Trustees then in office,
    may appoint such additional officers as it shall deem necessary.
 Section 4.
    The Chairman of the Society, with the approval of the affirmative
    vote of at least a majority of the members of the Board of
    Trustees then in office, shall have the authority to appoint the
    President of the Society, who shall function as the Society's
    Chief Executive Officer and shall be responsible for the day-to-
    day conduct of the Society's activities. The President shall
    perform his duties subject to the direction of the Board of
    Trustees, and for such compensation and on other terms and
    conditions as the Board of Trustees shall determine.
 Section 5.
    The President shall serve ex officio as a non-voting member of the
    Board of Trustees.

ISOC Informational [Page 5] RFC 2135 ISOC By-Laws April 1997

 Section 6.
    The officers of the Society shall not receive any compensation
    (apart from reimbursement of expenses) for their services as
    officers, but this shall not preclude reasonable compensation for
    services rendered to the Society by an officer in some other
    capacity.
 Section 7.
    Except for the President of the Society, who shall be compensated
    as determined by the Board of Trustees under Section 4 above, the
    officers of the Society shall hold office until their respective
    successors are chosen and qualify. Any officer of the Society may
    be removed by the Board of Trustees, by the affirmative vote of at
    least four-fifths of the members of the Board of Trustees then in
    office, whenever in their judgment the best interests of the
    Society will be served thereby. The President may be removed by
    the vote of a majority of members of the Board of Trustees then in
    office, and in accordance with the termination provisions of the
    President's employment contract.
 Section 8.
    Except for the President, whose duties shall be prescribed by the
    Board of Trustees under Section 4 above and detailed in the
    employment contract, the officers of the Society shall each have
    such powers and duties as generally pertain to their respective
    offices, as well as such powers and duties as from time to time
    may be conferred by the Board of Trustees or by the President of
    the Society.
 Section 9.
    Unless otherwise directed by the Board of Trustees, the Chairman
    of the Society, or in the event of the Chairman's inability to
    act, such other officer as may be designated by the Board or by
    the Chairman to act in the absence of the Chairman, shall have
    full power and authority on behalf of the Society to attend and to
    act and to vote at any meetings at which the Society may have a
    right to vote. The Board or the Chairman from time to time may
    confer like powers upon any other person or persons.

ARTICLE V - MEMBERS

 Section 1.
    The Society shall have two classes of members: Organizational
    Members and Individual Members.
 Section 2.
    The Society shall have the following categories of Organizational
    Members:

ISOC Informational [Page 6] RFC 2135 ISOC By-Laws April 1997

    (1) Regular Organizational Members:
       (a) Each organization which contributes to the Society a total
          of at least $10,000 during the Society's particular fiscal
          year; or, for years subsequent to the first year, such other
          amount as the Board of Trustees may specify for this class
          of member.
       (b) Each organization which is organized in the United States
          of America as a non-profit organization or is similarly
          organized in other countries, or is an agency of a national,
          regional or local government, may be a Regular
          Organizational Member of the Society at a 50% discount in
          annual contribution.
    (2) Start-up Members:
       A newly-formed organization may, during the first three years
       of its operation, be a member of the Society upon contributing
       a total of at least $1,000 during the Society's particular
       fiscal year. The 50% discount does not apply to the Start-up
       Member rate.
 Section 3.
    The Society shall have the following categories of Individual
    Members:
    (1) Regular Individual Members:
       Each individual who contributes to the Society the sum of $35
       during the Society's particular fiscal year; or, for years
       subsequent to the first year, such other amount as the Board of
       Trustees may specify for this class of member.
    (2) Student Members:
       Each bona fide full-time student who contributes to the year;
       or, for years subsequent to the first year, such other amount
       as the Board of Trustees may specify for this class of member.
       Student Members shall be non-voting members of the Society.
 Section 4.
    The Society shall have the following special member designations:
    (1) Founding Members:
       (a) Each for-profit organization which contributed to the
       Society a total of at least $20,000 during the period ending
       December 31, 1993, as long as such organization thereafter
       continues to be a Regular Organizational Member of the Society.

ISOC Informational [Page 7] RFC 2135 ISOC By-Laws April 1997

       (b) Each organization which was organized in the United States
       of America as a non-profit organization or is similarly
       organized in other countries, or is an agency of a national,
       regional or local government, and contributes a total of at
       least $10,000 during the period ending December 31, 1993, as
       long as such organization thereafter continues to be a Regular
       Organizational Member of the Society.
    (2) Pioneer Members:
       Each Regular Individual Member and each Student Member who
       joined during the period June 1 - December 31, 1991, shall be
       designated a Pioneer Member and shall retain that designation
       so long as Individual Member status is maintained.
 Section 5.
    The Board of Trustees from time to time may establish additional
    classes and categories of members.
 Section 6.
    The Society shall have such meetings of its members as the Board
    of Trustees shall from time to time fix.

ARTICLE VI - MISCELLANEOUS

 Section 1.
    In the event of the dissolution of the Society, the assets of the
    Society shall be distributed to a fund, foundation or corporation
    organized and operated exclusively for the purposes specified in
    Section 501(c)(3) of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code (or
    corresponding section of any future U.S. Federal Tax Code.
 Section 2.
    The Chairman is authorized to establish an Advisory Council
    consisting of a representative of each Founding Member and each
    Regular Organizational Member of the Society.
 Section 3.
    The Society's fiscal year shall be the calendar year. The
    Society's official monetary unit shall be the United States
    dollar.
 Section 4.
    English shall be the official language of the Society.
 Section 5.
    The Society may maintain liaison with other professional societies
    and similar organizations, wherever located, on activities which
    further the objectives of the Society, on such terms as the Board
    of Trustees may approve.

ISOC Informational [Page 8] RFC 2135 ISOC By-Laws April 1997

ARTICLE VII - AMENDMENTS

 Section 1.
    These By-Laws may be altered, amended, or repealed by the
    affirmative vote of at least four-fifths of the members of the
    Board of Trustees then in office, at any meeting of the Board if
    notice of such proposed action be contained in the notice of such
    meeting.

2. Security Considerations

 Documents of this type do not directly impact the security of the
 Internet infrastructure or its applications.

3. Author's Address

         Internet Society Board of Trustees
         Internet Society
         12020 Sunrise Vally Drive - Suite 210
         Reston, VA
         USA
         phone: +1 703 648 9888
         fax:   +1 703 638 9887
         email: isoc-trustees@isoc.org

ISOC Informational [Page 9]

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