[gnso-rpm-wg] Inferences (was Re: Mp3, Attendance, AC recording & AC Chat Review of all Rights Protection Mechanisms (RPMs) PDP Working Group)

George Kirikos icann at leap.com
Mon Jul 17 15:44:12 UTC 2017


Hello,

On Mon, Jul 17, 2017 at 10:41 AM, Greg Shatan <gregshatanipc at gmail.com> wrote:
> 1.  I don't believe there was anyone who denied there was any abuse of the
> TMCH.  Viewpoints are polarized enough in the WG; it makes matters worse to
> portray them as even more polarized than they actually are.  This has the
> secondary problem of "enabling" others to build on these specious claims.
> Not 3 minutes went by after your email, when George Kirikos leveled the
> "fake news" allegation at Georges Nehitchevansky that he "repeatedly denied
> that there was any abuse of the TMCH to begin with."  Georges has already
> stated in this thread that that was not the case, but I guess that was not
> sufficient for some people.

Folks seem to be interpreting "widespread" and "evidence" differently.
When Georges says something like:

http://mm.icann.org/pipermail/gnso-rpm-wg/2017-April/001506.html

"Paul.  I don't think you understand the point we are all making.
There is no need for the type of review you are asking for.  The
alleged abuse simply is not there.  So apart from being a waste of
time, and apart from the confidentiality reasons previously raised,
there is no need for this unless one is hell bent on conducting a
witch hunt in the name of so-called transparency in order to try and
prove what is essentially a negative."

I read that as him being in denial of abuse at all existing,
widespread or not. i.e. "the alleged abuse simply is not there".

But, then there are variations, when he's used the terms "widespread
abuse" or "widespread evidence of abuse", e.g. from:

http://mm.icann.org/pipermail/gnso-rpm-wg/2017-April/001458.html

"Actually it touches on the point here. If you are going to make
various arguments of alleged abuse in support of claimed transparency,
then it would it is relevant to know whether you are supporting a lack
of transparency in the whois side of things where abuse has been
rampant. While the TMCH and Whois are different animals a number of
the arguments being made here to support transparency have actually
been mirrored in the other context and rejected by those seeking
opacity.  And one major difference between ‎the two situations is that
there is widespread evidence of abuse of the whois system whereas here
in the TMCH context you do not have evidence of a widespread abuse of
the TMCH by brand owners. Nevertheless, you and others persist on
wanting to conduct a fishing expedition under the guise of so called
"transparency" to try and find some alleged widespread harm that
simply does not exist. To many folks on the other side of the aisle,
it appears that this is not about transparency but more about some
effort to gut existing protections and to obtain the release of
confidential information of brand owners as to what they did or did
not register.   Perhaps this may not be the intent, but we all know
that once that information is out the gaming will really begin.
‎Again, perhaps there are tweeks that could be made to improve the
current system, but there is no real basis for undertaking the broad
review that is being sought and certainly not for undoing the entire
existing system."

or more recently:

http://mm.icann.org/pipermail/gnso-rpm-wg/2017-July/002187.html

"I think the basis problem has been and remains that the basis for all
this hunting around and data requests is an unfounded claim that there
 is an abundance of “abusive and overreaching tmch registrations.” The
evidence of such alleged widespread abuse has not been presented,
because it doesn’t exist.  What all this sound and fury about data
etc. reminds me of is Donald Trump claiming with basically no evidence
that there was widespread voter fraud to explain why he do not get the
majority of the popular vote in the US and then setting up a special
commission to investigate the matter in the hope of cobbling together
some sort of proof.  In the end it’s a waste of everybody’s time and
money."

(quoted in full, to not be accused of misquoting). Here's the thing,
though. When you say something like "the evidence of such alleged
widespread abuse has not been presented, because it doesn't exist",
that doesn't make any distinction between EVIDENCE and PROOF. Perhaps
Georges N. intended to write "proof" instead of "evidence". How do you
prove "widespread abuse"? You start by presenting any "evidence of
abuse". It's only once you have a LOT of evidence of abuse that you
can then say that you have proof that there was "widespread abuse."
Georges N.  might disagree that the total amount of evidence has yet
proven "widespread abuse", but when you start saying "evidence hasn't
been presented", that denies the evidence itself of any abuse.

We already know that the percentage of gamed/abused sunrise
registrations exceeds the proportion of domains that lead to a UDRP.
i.e. is the term "widespread" (in percentage terms) somehow applied
numerically differently when saying "the cybersquatting problem is
widespread", than when saying "there are widespread abuses of the
sunrise periods"?

Sincerely,

George Kirikos
416-588-0269
http://www.leap.com/


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