Ira Magaziner
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Ira Magaziner was an aide to President Clinton and later became his chief Internet policy advisor. He is perhaps best known for starting what later became ICANN. Magaziner is also known for leading, along with Hillary Clinton, the failed Task Force to Reform Health Care in the early Clinton administration. Despite calls from some that he step down after the Health Care Program died in Congress, Clinton asked Magaziner to stay to become his Internet Czar. As the Internet was still in its developing stages, Magaziner played a great role in maintaining the Internet as a duty free zone.
During his college years at Brown University, Magaziner was one of the two architects of the "New Curriculum", a liberal academic approach which includes no core requirements aside from the concentration the student pursues. Magaziner excelled academically at Brown; he was named valedictorian of his class in 1969. He was named a Rhodes Scholar upon graduation. At Oxford, Magaziner met Bill Clinton, also a Rhodes Scholar, who would become a close friend and boss during the 1990s.
Magaziner was a successful business consultant prior to his White House years. He is currently CEO of SJS Advisors, a consulting company. Simultaneously, Magaziner is Chairman of the AIDS Initiative at the William Jefferson Clinton Foundation.
Magaziner lives in Bristol, Rhode Island with his wife Suzanne and children Seth, Jonathan and Sarah.