[CWG-Stewardship] Fwd: Congress to ICANN: Approve .Amazon as proof of accountability, before IANA Transition

Erick Iriarte eiriarte at iriartelaw.com
Thu Jun 25 13:16:54 UTC 2015


Note: in some cultures this called blackmail ;)



> Inicio del mensaje reenviado:
> 
> De: "Erick Iriarte Ahon" <eiriarte at alfa-redi.org>
> Asunto: [derecho-informatico] Congress to ICANN: Approve .Amazon as proof of accountability, before IANA Transition
> Fecha: 25 de junio de 2015, 10:07:39 GMT-3
> 
> Fuente: http://domainnewsafrica.com/congress-icann-approve-amazon-proof-accountability-iana-transition/?utm_campaign=shareaholic&utm_medium=linkedin&utm_source=socialnetwork <http://domainnewsafrica.com/congress-icann-approve-amazon-proof-accountability-iana-transition/?utm_campaign=shareaholic&utm_medium=linkedin&utm_source=socialnetwork>
> 
> Congress to ICANN: Approve .Amazon as proof of accountability, before IANA Transition
> By Evans Taylor • On June 24, 2015 • In Featured
> 
> The co-chairs of the Congressional Trademark Caucus, Rep. Randy Forbes [R-VA4] and Rep. Suzan DelBene [D-WA1]have written to ICANN informing them that they need to approve Amazon’s application for .Amazon which has been rejected due to “rights” asserted by Brazil nor Peru in relation to the Amazon Forest raised by Governmental Advisory Committee (GAC). This they say as proof that
> 
> “ICANN can demonstrate to Congress that it is accountable to the global community, independent of governmental interference, and respectful of international trademark law; such a demonstration is crucial before the IANA functions transition.”
> This is the second letter coming after the recnt June 10 2015 letter  written and signed by 11 members of the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property and the Internet goes where ICANN Governmental Advisory Committee (GAC) new gTLD interference received a fresh Congressional attention. the Congress men wrote to urge the ICANN to address concerns that it may become susceptible to governmental interference without due consideration of policies developed through the multistakeholder process under its current structure. The letter said
> 
> “ICANN’s GAC appears to have overridden several community-developed policies in recent years. Such an outcome is incompatible with the bottom-up, multistakeholder model reflected in ICANN’s Articles of Incorporation and By-Laws.”
> .Amazon is among a list of other new gTLD applications including .africa, .gcc that were largely affected by the ICANN Beijing GAC objection advice that asked the ICANN board to block them from proceeding to delegation due to what GAC erroneously concluded were concerns over geographic domains.
> 
> It is becoming more apparent that Congress is keen to participate in the modelling of the new transition architecture and the House of Representatives recently overwhelmingly passed  the H.R. 805, the Domain Openness Through Continued Oversight Matters (DOTCOM) Act authored by Rep. John Shimkus (R-Ill.), that gives Congress a 30-day window to review the transition plan before the National Telecommunications and Information Administration relinquishes control.
> 
> ICANN’s new gTLD process has several avenues that new gTLD applicants can go through to seek recourse in the event that their application is stopped by ICANN’s processes and especially the board.  The new gTLD program has more than 11 Independent Review processes where affected applicants are seeking to overturn both GAC and the New gTLD Program Committee (NGPC)’s unfavorable decisions.
> 
> The latest .Amazon interest by congress as a prerequisite for ICANN to proof that it is indeed ready to run without IANA oversight could embolden other applicants to seek the voice of congress in resolving their cases.   Other applicants who have sought congressional voice on ICANN’s role in new gTLD hitches include .Africa applicant DotConnectAfrica (DCA), who in fact was the first to bring matters of ICANN accountability to congress.   Post congressional engagement, DCA has concurrently initiated the IRP process of ICANN whose result is expected to be decided by an IRP panel, before further congressional intervention like Amazon.
> 
> Read the whole letter  fro Congress to Dr. Steven Crocker Board of Directors Chair, and Mr. Fadi Chehade Chief Executive Officer ICANN
> 
> ####
> 
> June 19, 2015
> 
> Dr. Steven Crocker Board of Directors Chair Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) 12025 Waterfront Drive, Suite 300 Los Angeles, CA 90094-2536
> 
> As co-chairs of the Congressional Trademark Caucus, we write to encourage you to actively seek resolution of the .AMAZON generic top level domains (gTLDs). We understand that Amazon has recently reiterated to 1CANN its interest in finding a mutually acceptable solution for the .AMAZON gTLDs. At this critical stage in which the United States Government prepares to transition stewardship of the IANA functions, we believe it is incumbent upon ICANN to resolve this issue, demonstrating that all stakeholders and trademark owners can be treated fairly, according to ICANN’s multistakeholder-developed rules and existing international law.
> 
> Amazon’s 2012 applications for the .AMAZON gTLDs conformed fully to the requirements of ICANN’s Applicant Guidebook, received full marks in ICANN’s application evaluation, and were consistent with its globally protected “Amazon” trademark. Nevertheless, ICANN refused to allow the .AMAZON applications to proceed after the Governmental Advisoiy Committee objected — outside of ICANN’s application objection process — because of sovereignty concerns raised by Brazil and Peru. In fact, neither Brazil nor Peru has any legally recognized rights — let alone intellectual property rights — in the term “Amazon” and there is no basis in international law for either country to assert rights in the term “Amazon.” Based on the rules set by the ICANN community and supported by international law generally as well as international trademark law specifically, ICANN’s rejection of the .AMAZON applications appears to have no legal basis and potentially creates a troubling precedent of governments disregarding established principles of international law, including international trademark law.
> 
> We strongly support attempts to find a mutually acceptable solution for .AMAZON and we urge ICANN to convene the interested parties. By resolving this outstanding issue, ICANN can demonstrate to Congress that it is accountable to the global community, independent of governmental interference, and respectful of international trademark law; such a demonstration is crucial before the 1ANA functions transition.
> 
> Sincerely,
> 
> J. Randy Forbes Co-Chair Congressional Trademark Caucus
> 
> PRINTED ON RECYCLED PAPER
> 
> Suzan DelBene Co-Chair Congressional Trademark Caucus
> 
>  ####
> _________________________________________________________________
> Erick Iriarte
> Área de Derecho de Nuevas Tecnologias
> 
> IRIARTE & ASOCIADOS
> Dirección: Miró Quesada 191, of. 510, Lima 01, Perú
> Telefax: (+511) 2035400
> Sitio web: iriartelaw.com <http://iriartelaw.com/>
> Twitter: @ialaw
> Facebook: facebook.com/ialaw <http://facebook.com/ialaw>
> 
> Por favor antes de imprimir piense en nuestro medio ambiente, una hoja puede hacer la diferencia en un bosque.
> 
> Please, before printing, think of our environment, a leaf can make a difference in a forest.
> 
> Declaracion de Confidencialidad
> El contenido de este mensaje de correo electronico y de sus archivos adjuntos esta(n) dirigido(s) exclusivamente a el(los) destinatario(s) del mismo.  Adicionalmente, este mensaje y su contenido pueden ser privilegiados y estar cubiertos por la reserva profesional entre abogado y cliente.  Si usted no es el destinatario indicado, o si este mensaje le ha sido enviado por error, queda advertido en el sentido de no leer, divulgar, reproducir, distribuir, diseminar o utilizar este mensaje en forma alguna.  La entrega de este mensaje a cualquier persona diferente del(de los) destinatario(s) a quien(es) se ha dirigido no constituye una renuncia de privilegios o confidencialidad.  Si usted recibe este mensaje por error, por favor advierta al remitente mediante correo de respuesta; adicionalmente le  solicitamos que inmediatamente proceda a suprimir este mensaje y sus archivos adjuntos, si los hubiere.
> 
> Statement of Confidentiality
> The contents of this e-mail message and its attachments are intended solely for the addressee(s) hereof.  In addition, this e-mail transmission may be confidential and it may be subject to privilege protecting communications between attorneys or solicitors and their clients.  If you are not the named addressee, or if this message has been addressed to you in error, you are directed not to read, disclose, reproduce, distribute, disseminate or otherwise use this e-mail.  Delivery of this message to any person other than the intended recipient(s) is not intended in any way to waive privilege or confidentiality.  If you have received this transmission in error, please alert the sender by reply e-mail; we also request that you immediately delete this message and its attachments, if any. Please, before printing, think of our environment, a leaf can make a difference in a forest.
> 
> 
> You are receiving this message because you are a member of the community Foro de Derecho Informático. <https://dgroups.org/alfa-redi-global/derecho-informatico>.
> 
> View this contribution on the web site <https://dgroups.org/_/g95d08lq>
> A reply to this message will be sent to all members of Foro de Derecho Informático..
> 
> Reply to sender <mailto:eiriarte at alfa-redi.org> | Unsubscribe <mailto:leave.derecho-informatico at dgroups.org>

-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mm.icann.org/pipermail/cwg-stewardship/attachments/20150625/bbae077b/attachment.html>


More information about the CWG-Stewardship mailing list