[bc-gnso] gTLD global outreach programme

Phil Corwin pcorwin at butera-andrews.com
Sun Jul 12 19:29:25 UTC 2009


Good to hear from you Michael. I am on the train to NYC at this moment and looking forward to a day of constructive engagement tomorrow.
As for Rod Beckstrom I know there are many who hope that his inspiring remarks in Sydney translate into meaningful regime change.
Philip S. Corwin
Partner, Butera & Andrews
1301 Pennsylvania Ave., NW
Suite 500
Washington, DC 20004
2026635347/Office
2022556172/Cell

"Luck is the residue of design." -- Branch Rickey

________________________________
From: Michael Castello <michaelc at traveler.com>
To: Phil Corwin
Cc: BC Secretariat <secretariat at bizconst.org>; BC gnso <bc-gnso at icann.org>
Sent: Sun Jul 12 15:22:03 2009
Subject: Re[2]: [bc-gnso] gTLD global outreach programme


Hello Phil,


I read your comments and agree. ICANN protocol appears to be a smoke screen. It seems to me that ICANN has created an onion skin type of bureaucracy that on its surface appears to give the impression that it is inclusive in its decision making with the public and constituencies. In reality there appears to be a nucleus amongst its ranks that decide future agenda and policy. Whomever makes the funding decisions for ICANN may well be those that control it.


It is mind boggling to see the time and effort many put into trying to help ICANN's future growth just be ignored and diminished in their capacity. I do hope future ICANN President Rod Beckstrom gives ICANN the direction it badly needs.


Michael Castello

CEO/President

Castello Cities Internet Network, Inc.

http://www.ccin.com

michael at ccin.com<mailto:michael at ccin.com>


--

Saturday, July 11, 2009, 9:40:50 AM, you wrote:




I am very puzzled, and indeed disturbed,  by this Outreach Program as well as by why ICANN is undertaking the considerable expense of facilitating it.


The explanation of the events (at http://www.icann.org/en/topics/new-gtlds/consultation-outreach-en.htm) states:


With the expected introduction of New generic top-level domains (New gTLDs) into the market place in 2010, ICANN is hosting a series of live events and webinars starting June 2009. These events are designed in a wide range of formats to address different levels of knowledge.

The purpose of these events is to explain the Program, share the progress that ICANN has made to-date and to receive feedback from the community that will facilitate shaping the program.

These events are geared towards businesses small and large, trademark experts, professional associations, consumer and other civil society groups, members of the domain name industry, government officials, potential applicants and the ICANN community. All events are free of charge, but pre-registration is required.

During the upcoming consultation sessions in New York (13 July) and London (15 July), attendees will have the chance to hear from ICANN staff and others who have contributed to the ongoing process, including members of the Implementation Recommendation Team (IRT) that submitted their report to the ICANN Board on measures to protect intellectual property. The proposed events in Hong Kong (24 July) and Abu-Dhabi (4 August) will mainly focus on the New gTLDs and Internationalized Domain Names (IDNs) programs details. The main language of the events is English. (emphasis added)



I will be attending the NYC event, and it and London are billed as "Live Consultations", described as follows:



Live consultations will engage the global Internet community to discuss workable solutions to outstanding issues on specific aspects of the program, particularly trademark protection and malicious behavior. These sessions are aimed at people that have been closely following the Program development and still have concerns.



The Hong Kong and Abu-Dhabi programs are more general "Live Outreach" events meant for a more general and less well informed audience; as no agenda has yet been posted for either event it is not possible to know what shape they will take.



A review of the Agenda for the NYC event ( http://www.icann.org/en/topics/new-gtlds/ny-agenda-speakers-13jul09-en.pdf) reveals that the vast majority of its focus is on trademark protection. The time breakdown is as follows:



General introduction -- 30 minutes

Trademark protection (IRT Report) -- 4 hours 45 minutes

Malicious behavior -- 1 hour 30 minutes

Economic Impact & Root Scaling Security and Stability -- 45 minutes



In other words, of the entire 7.5 hours of the program, more than 60% is devoted to trademark protection.



Given this heavy emphasis on trademark protection -- and given the clear failure of the IRT report to garner consensus support from the community, as was apparent to anyone who attended the Sydney meeting or has reviewed a sample of the comments posted at  http://forum.icann.org/lists/irt-final-report/index.html -- one would have hoped that ICANN would seek to present a balanced presentation, acknowledging that those who have presented well thought out criticisms of aspects of the IRT Report "have contributed to the ongoing process" just as much as members of the IRT. But a review of the scheduled speakers shows that all but one is an IRT member or other person who will be strongly supporting its report; the only critic I can identify is Richard Tindal of Demand Media, and their principal concern is the proposed GPML. There is not a single speaker likely to criticize the very controversial URS, which critics (like myself, on behalf of ICA) have charged constitutes not only a major and unjustifiable diminution of registrant rights currently available under the UDRP but is also a major new Policy initiative, and not a mere technical implementation detail, and therefore cannot be adopted outside the normal PDP process overseen by the GNSO.



So my first question relates to why there is no adequate balance to this panel on trademark protection that recognizes the very real splits within the ICANN community on the IRT report? How are attendees adequately informed by such a one-sided presentation?



Another question is raised by the claim in the program description that these events will "receive feedback from the community that will facilitate shaping the program". What's going on here? The IRT was disbanded after delivering its Report, and that Report was thoroughly debated in Sydney. The comment period closed this past Monday. So, from a procedural standpoint, any "feedback" received at these events, in which critics of the report are relegated to the audience, should have no effect on "shaping the program". As the NYC Consultation is aimed at individuals who have been "closely following the program development" all these individuals were either already heard in Sydney or had an opportunity to comment officially.



The Chair of the GNSO Council filed a comment, in her personal capacity, stating that the IRT was an attempt by trademark interests to have a second bite at the apple, to put proposals back in the mix that had already been rejected in the GNSO consensus process, and that adoption of the URS as a mere implementation detail would destroy the legitimacy of ICANN's bottom-up consensus process:



...the work of the IRT, if it goes directly from the IRT to

implementation will not only constitute new top down policy but some

parts of it will be new policy that the GNSO specifically decided there

was no consensus for making. Going beyond the consensus making purview

of the GNSO to create policy as part of the implementation cycle of the

program not only directly contradicts the policy made by the GNSO but

also endangers the legitimacy of the entire consensus policy process.

Further one of the recommendations, the Uniform Rapid Suspension

System, constitutes an entirely new policy mechanism that affects

previous policy, the UDRP, without proper policy review. (http://forum.icann.org/lists/irt-final-report/pdfNhBqKA4CfN.pdf)



So do trademark interests not just get a second bite at the apple outside the GNSO consensus process, but also get extra time after the closing of the formal comment period to further "shape" the process? This is not only wrong but silly -- from a substantive viewpoint, depending on who turns out, the NYC and London events can only demonstrate one or both of the following propositions:

 *   trademark interests strongly support the recommendations in the IRT report, produced by a group which had its membership and agenda controlled by the IPC
 *   other members of the ICANN community have strong reservations about or outright opposition to virtually every aspect of the IRT Report, including whether various proposals contained within it are major new policy initiatives that require a formal PDP process

Well, we already knew all that. didn't we? I shall be very surprised if any feedback is received at the NYC event that has not already been fed to ICANN in Sydney or through the comment process.



A last question would be how much $ is ICANN spending to put on these events and to fly various staff around the world to them? And are any of the other speakers having their expenses covered by ICANN, just as members of the IRT received travel support at a time when ICANN tells other constituencies and supporting organizations that it lacks funds for their monetary support requests?



To put my comments here in context, I invite you to visit http://www.internetcommerce.org/node/198 which contains the text of ICA's comment letter as well as an introduction that documents the IRT Report dissent and criticism coming from key ICANN constituencies. ICA supported some aspects of the Report with proper tweaking; while we took strong exception to the URS we suggested an expedited PDP that could put in place balanced UDRP reforms prior to the launch of any new gTLD in the fourth quarter of 2010 -- this process could directly benefit trademark owners by addressing many .com problems, which is where the vast majority of their current infringement issues arise and are likely to keep doing so in the future. And, more important, it would respect and not run roughshod over ICANN's policymaking process.



In closing, let me note two other news items of the last week to put this whole IRT debate in broader context:

 *   On July 8th Mary Kay Cosmetics sued Yahoo! for trademark infringement (http://www.thedomains.com/2009/07/09/another-day-another-suit-yahoo-sued-trademark-infringement-in-e-mail-advertising/ )  alleging that Yahoo! inserted links to unauthorized resellers in e-mails sent by Mary Kay salespeople send to their customers. I note this not to endorse the allegations but simply to observe that that trademark infringement suits are a growth industry and that even strong infringement critics and IRT report supporters like Yahoo! can find themselves in the cross-hairs.
 *   Comcast has just announced a "Domain Helper Service" (http://domainnamewire.com/2009/07/09/comcast-starts-typosquatting-domain-names/ ) that serves up ads against nonexistent domain names, mostly typos of legitimate trademarked names, thereby following in the footsteps of other major ISPs. If these names were registered as individual domains they might well be subject to UDRP or URS actions, but ISPs contend that serving up ad pages (primarily supplied by Google and Yahoo!) and not 404 error messages is a customer services and not typosquatting. So I wonder if we can get ironclad pledges from members of the ISP constituency (many of whom are strong IRT report proponents) that they will not serve up ads against any domain that has been suspended in a URS action? And if they won't do that, then why are we taking the risk of tearing the ICANN community apart and destroying its policy-making process? After all, if an Internet user sees the same ads when they mistype micosofft.web what's the difference if a domain owner or an ISP is pocketing the PPC income that may be generated?

If you've read this far, thanks for your time on this weekend.








Philip S. Corwin

Partner

Butera & Andrews

1301 Pennsylvania Ave., NW

Suite 500

Washington, DC 20004

202-347-6875 (office)

202-347-6876 (fax)

202-255-6172 (cell)

"Luck is the residue of design." -- Branch Rickey

________________________________________

From: owner-bc-gnso at icann.org [owner-bc-gnso at icann.org] On Behalf Of BC Secretariat [secretariat at bizconst.org]

Sent: Thursday, July 09, 2009 11:12 AM

To: BC gnso

Subject: [bc-gnso] gTLD global outreach programme


Dear Members


Please find below a link to information about the ICANN gTLD global outreach

and consultation programme


Best wishes

Gary


http://www.registration123.com/ICANN/GTLD

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