[Gnso-newgtld-wg] Challenge to designation on Recommendation 35.2

Rubens Kuhl rubensk at nic.br
Wed Jan 13 23:10:04 UTC 2021



> On 13 Jan 2021, at 19:46, Jim Prendergast <jim at GALWAYSG.COM> wrote:
> 
> Cheryl and Jeff 
>  
> Thanks for the call yesterday explaining the process by which you made consensus designations.  I appreciated the tremendous effort that went into this exercise.
>  
> Purpose of this email is to challenge the designation of Recommendation 35.2 which is currently deemed Consensus.  While I may refer to determinations for recommendations, it is not my intent to challenge those with this email.  
>  
> For reference, 35.2 reads as follows
> Recommendation 35.2: Consistent with the Application Change processes set forth under Topic 20: Application Change Requests, the Applicant Guidebook (AGB) must reflect that applicants will be permitted to creatively resolve contention sets in a multitude of manners, including but not limited to business combinations or other forms of joint ventures and private resolutions (including private auctions).
> • All private resolutions reached by means of forming business combinations or other joint ventures resulting in the withdrawal of one or more applications are subject to the Application Change processes set forth under Topic 20: Application Change Requests.
> • Any materially modified application resulting from a private resolution will be subject to a new operational comment period on the changes as well as a new period to file objections; provided however, objections during this new period must be of the type that arise due to the changing circumstances of the application and not merely the type of objection that could have been filed against the surviving application or the withdrawn applications in the contention set during the initial objection filing period.
> •All contention sets resolved through private resolution shall adhere to the transparency requirements set forth in the Contention Resolution Transparency Requirements in the relevant recommendation.
>  
> My challenge touches on the following points – inconsistency of determinations between recommendations and Leadership’s desire to preserve other parts of the recommendation <>. 
>  
> Inconsistent determinations
> In discussing the determination to classify recommendation 35.4 as Strong Support but Significant Opposition, Leadership talked about the number comments received, the diversity of those comments and a consultation of public comments.   Further examination shows that the majority the 11 comments on the consensus call came from members of the IPC which should not surprise anyone as they also filed a public comment <https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1kmZRLAsW6wlTyQ8LA3KhOQzU1UABL9zCPWw39Yc9lB8/edit#gid=1091535370> on this.  The only other comment on this recommendation was a support of the IPC response to Public Comment by PETILLION Law Firm, an IPC member.  The balance of the consensus call comments came from individuals, RySG members and an ALAC member.
>  
> Compare that to the comments that came in on 35.2.  While there may not been the same number of emails that came in on 35.4, you had more diversity than what was accepted for 35.4.  There were consensus call responses from individuals as well as members of the ALAC, RySG, and the GAC. In the public comments, you had opposition to Private auctions from the following ICANN SO/AC/SGs
> Non-Commercial Stakeholder Group - “…we support the move to set aside private actions.” “Private auctions should simply be banned, and other solutions such as Vickrey auctions and “sealed bid, second price auctions” through the ICANN-run auction process should be adopted for the fairness and integrity of the auction process.”
> Business Constituency - "As we said in 2018, the BC recommends that private auctions be eliminated.”
> At-Large Advisory Committee - The ALAC remains concerned about efforts to “game” the application process, in part, through the use of private auctions. We disagree with the SubPro WG recommendation to allow them and believe that attempts to determine “good faith” will ultimately be little more than window dressing. Further, the proposed “sealed bid, second price auction” compromise, while superior to the status quo, represents a highly watered down version of the far superior traditional Vickrey auction. The ALAC implore the working group to revisit the prohibition of private auctions and implement a true Vickrey auction solution.”
> When asked if leadership had consulted these responses to the public comments, we were told that unless someone from one of those SO/ACs/SGs specifically replied on the consensus call, they were not consulted.  By that standard, the opposition from the Business Constituency and the NCSG was ignored and not used to calculate the designation. 

Jim, 

As I posted in the chat during the call, you are totally misconstruing what was taken into account to reach the consensus level designations. But let's not make this about what happened, but of how it could be improved the better reflect the consensus level designations received. 

>  
> This discounting of a comment from a SO/AC/SG is especially troubling because as many in this this working group have said, as an individual, we cannot speak for an SO/AC/SG but when the SO/AC/SG does speak, like the NCSG, BC and ALAC have, it should carry weight. Many of us also know how difficult it is to get a diverse group of voices within an SO/AC/SG to agree to submit a statement on behalf of the entire group.  To hear these were not considered is disappointing.
>  
> Leadership’s desire to preserve other parts of the recommendation
> During our discussion, I agreed with Leadership’s assertion that there was not opposition in spirit to the ability to settle contention sets via “private resolution” which could include joint ventures and other arrangements as well as all the other provisions included in the recommendation.  But the drafting of the recommendation and the inclusion of “and private resolutions (including private auctions)” poisons the entire recommendation. 

Not quite. What you mention is that the per recommendations granularity is not enough. So, my take from what you said is that we should designate 35.2 except private auctions as having consensus, but to establish that any part of 35 that goes to private auctions (not private settlements) to have a different categorization, which would be the same as 35.4, strong support with significant opposition. We need to be as granular as the WG members designation were. In this case it seems that to carve out the specific topic is required. 

>  
> I understand the desire of leadership to not have to discard what are very good recommendations but in response to leadership’s direction to be very specific, people were specific in their opposition to private auctions and not to the entire recommendation.  If WG members had known that we had to object to the entire recommendation, as opposed to being specific, the responses would have been different. I fear that in a desire to preserve the rest of the recommendation, leadership is discounting the opposition to Private Auctions.  While understandable, that potential bias cannot stand.
>  

That's an speculation that we can't use to assess the comments. They were what they were, and we can't rinse and repeat just to achieve the desired goal of some. 



Rubens

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