[gnso-rds-pdp-wg] Principle on Proportionality for "Thin Data"access

allison nixon elsakoo at gmail.com
Wed May 31 23:04:29 UTC 2017


Your e-mail stated:
>>Data that is gleaned from a file related to an individual, ie in this
case their registration data, even if it is nameservers and the like, is
their personal data.

And it was stated in support of restricting public access to this
information.

Eliminating the other data elements may make troubleshooting harder, but
eliminating nameservers on the basis of privacy means the registrars won't
be able to disseminate it at all, and it will literally break the Internet.
Were you thinking of the absurd possibilities when you wrote it?

Your references don't change the fact of how DNS resolution works. If
you're going to object to that characterization, then I formally object to
this one, which is similar to the sentiment that has underpinned this group
since the beginning:

>>At a time when increasing imbalance in ‘informational power’, when
governments and business organizations alike amass hitherto unprecedented
amounts of data about individuals, and are increasingly in the position to
compile detailed profiles that will predict their behavior (reinforcing
informational imbalance and reducing their autonomy), it is ever more
important to ensure that the interests of the individuals to preserve their
privacy and autonomy be protected.

In the context of WHOIS, it's ridiculous borderline conspiracy theory. A
tiny percent of the population owns any domains, and an even smaller
percent disclose anything in the WHOIS. This isn't intrusive like ad
tracking or companies selling health data. This is information that people
enter when they stake a claim in a public space. Blinding defenders from
being able to judge if we want to interact with inbound traffic reduces our
autonomy and only empowers the massive problem of abuse. Mischaracterizing
public WHOIS info, which has been public for decades, as some sort of
scandalous leak of data is ridiculous. It also falsely shades the
motivations of the people who are asking for it to remain open. The truth
is that this data is useless for what is insinuated, and we aren't asking
to keep the data open so we can snoop on some dissident by knowing what
their junk email and domain creation date is.

And just because someone in the world is(and they certainly are), it
doesn't mean we must shut down the whole system.

On top of that, no one is forced to disclose damaging info. If you want to
use an ICANN domain, fill out the form. If you don't want to, get an
.onion, get a dynamic domain, go somewhere else. Or use WHOIS privacy. Or
use junk info.

You can demand respect, but many arguments in this group do not inspire
respect.

   - When people claim to be concerned about spam as a motivation for
   eliminating WHOIS, and then don't listen when actual anti-spam people tell
   them it will destroy a major tool in the fight against spam, that does not
   inspire respect.
   - When people propose to put basic functionality on the chopping block,
   that does not inspire respect.
   - When theoretical edge cases are dreamed up as rebuttals to real and
   frequent issues, that does not inspire respect.
   - When anti-abuse is judged as anathema to privacy and are disrespected,
   that does not inspire respect.

I along with many other security professionals here are not opposed to
following the law. Collectively much of our work involves ensuring
compliance with the law, including privacy laws, HIPAA, data breach laws,
et cetera. Despite frequently being mischaracterized as wannabe cops by
list members, we are not cops. We actually implement the protection of
privacy, including the need to prevent data breaches- which can incur
massive fines thanks to some privacy laws. Yet here we are, butting heads
with "privacy experts", who by and large don't want to hear about
operational issues or the wider impact of their narrow agenda.

This observation isn't solely about you personally, and your work history
is irrelevant here. It is an observation about the group as a whole since I
became active. This isn't privacy versus security. This is quite literally,
privacy versus privacy. And one side of the argument has operational
experience. Security in the Internet sense involves- confidentiality,
integrity, and availability. And most efforts are focused on the first
item. We are not the NSA hunting terrorists or tapping phones or whatever
youall imagine we are. We are trying to prevent data breaches and identity
theft and phishing and quite literally everything that privacy laws are
written to address. That's why these arguments are so ridiculous.


On Wed, May 31, 2017 at 3:42 PM, Stephanie Perrin <
stephanie.perrin at mail.utoronto.ca> wrote:

> I would like to formally object to this kind of characterization of the
> people who are working in good faith on this working group:
> "self-proclaimed privacy advocates".  I can only speak for myself, so I
> will do only that.....I am not a self-proclaimed privacy advocate.  I have
> been working as a privacy professional since 1984, when I became one of the
> first privacy coordinators for the Department of Communications of Canada.
> I was the first president in 1986 of CAPA, the privacy professionals
> association which we formed and which collaborated for many years with
> ASAP, the US equivalent.  I could go on and on and if you require
> references as to whether or not our views should be accepted as having
> merit, regardless of whether you agree with them or not, I am happy to
> provide them.  But please, let us treat one another with a bit more respect.
>
> Stephanie Perrin
>
> On 2017-05-31 13:39, allison nixon wrote:
>
> Good faith does not excuse ignorance. Such a mistake reveals the extreme
> tunnel vision by many self proclaimed privacy advocates here. It shows why
> they butt heads with people who work every day in the trenches to actually
> protect privacy of real- not theoretical- victims.
>
> On Wed, May 31, 2017 at 1:30 PM, Jeremy Malcolm <jmalcolm at eff.org> wrote:
>
>> Again, I really think we need to dial down the level of sarcasm here.
>> The proportionality proposal was made in good faith.
>>
>> However, I'm from a privacy advocacy organization and even I have agreed
>> that there are operational problems with any proposal to limit
>> unauthenticated access to thin WHOIS data.  I agree that while privacy is
>> an absolutely key principle to be upheld, so is the generativity of the
>> Internet, and that unauthenticated access to thin WHOIS data, much of which
>> just replicates the information that end users make available through their
>> own nameservers, is part of the permissionless innovation that underpins
>> many real world Internet applications.
>>
>>
>> On 31/5/17 10:14 am, allison nixon wrote:
>>
>> Which includes nameservers, which are collected and propagated by the
>> registrars. If this is deemed sensitive information, then the registrars
>> should be careful sharing that data via other outlets without tight
>> restrictions!
>>
>> On Wed, May 31, 2017 at 1:09 PM, Michael Peddemors <
>> michael at linuxmagic.com> wrote:
>>
>>> On 17-05-31 10:07 AM, allison nixon wrote:
>>>
>>>> the rest of it can't be. You can't put a DNS query behind a EULA. We
>>>> can't pretend there are restrictions on this data.
>>>>
>>>>
>>> We aren't discussing DNS or any other places that data is available as
>>> part of this working group. Only the informed consent of data held in whois
>>> thin data.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
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>>> Visit us at http://www.linuxmagic.com @linuxmagic
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>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> _________________________________
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>> --
>> Jeremy Malcolm
>> Senior Global Policy Analyst
>> Electronic Frontier Foundationhttps://eff.orgjmalcolm@eff.org
>>
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>>
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