[Gnso-ppsai-pdp-wg] PPSAI - suggestions for III.B, C, and E

Metalitz, Steven met at msk.com
Thu Apr 16 13:37:19 UTC 2015


I am fine with putting these changes on the agenda for discussion on Tuesday, as well as continuing this discussion on list,  but as a matter of factual accuracy, here is the corresponding language that was brought to the WG by the informal subgroup of service providers and IPR interests on Feb. 23 (“the language of the committee that drafted it”):

Disclosure can be reasonably refused, consistent with the general policy stated herein, including, for example, the reason that the Service Provider has already published Customer contact details in Whois as the result of termination of privacy and proxy service; that the Customer has objected to the disclosure and has provided compelling reasons against disclosure; or that the Customer has surrendered its domain name registration in lieu of disclosure, if the Service Provider offers its Customers this option.

So we can consider three options:

(A) The original language bolded above (“compelling reasons”);
(B)The language later proposed (“adequate reasons”);
(c)Val’s proposal (“sufficient reasons” that one of the two criteria in the templates has not been met, i.e., either there is a reasonable basis for concluding there is not an infringement or there is a reasonable basis for concluding the infringement is defensible).

Note that this is in addition to the “pretext” basis for refusing disclosure, which in its latest formulation reads as follows:

(5) that the Customer has provided, or the Provider has found, specific information, facts, and/or circumstances showing that the Requestor’s trademark or copyright complaint is a pretextual means of obtaining the Customer’s contact details for some other purpose unrelated to addressing the alleged infringement

Steve

From: Kathy Kleiman [mailto:kathy at kathykleiman.com]
Sent: Thursday, April 16, 2015 8:32 AM
To: Williams, Todd; gnso-ppsai-pdp-wg at icann.org; Graeme Bunton; Metalitz, Steven
Subject: Re: [Gnso-ppsai-pdp-wg] PPSAI - suggestions for III.B, C, and E

All,
I think there are a lot of major language shifts taking place a) after our calls and b) in hopes of bringing final language into the Report that is being finalized today. Unfortunately, I think Val's language for III.C.2 and especially III.C.3 has enormous consequences and cast a major change to language that has remained essentially unchanged in our many weeks of discussion. The original language was essentially brought to the WG, accepted by the WG and ready to be put out for comment by the WG -- with brackets (as in so many other parts of the report) -- but all the time with the language of the committee that drafted it.

Now we are being asked to review such changes a) under a fast deadline and b) with no in-person comment.  I have to object - and call for the original language to stay. If we want to meet next week to talk about these new proposed changes, let's do that. But we have no precedent of accepting major changes without exploring them in person and on the calls -- as we have explored every other significant change.

Best,
Kathy
:
Thanks Kathy.  On III(C)(2) and (3): I don’t think we ever had agreement on the language.  “Adequate” was still bracketed precisely b/c we hadn’t agreed on that standard (I think the initial language was “compelling”, and I think it had changed a couple times in between).

In the spirit of trying to address some of our loose ends and leave as little language bracketed as possible, I think Val’s proposal for III(C)(2) and (3) does a good job of finding a “third way” between the “compelling” camp and the “adequate” camp.  Rather than pick b/w those two standards, it just says: let’s use the mirror of what the Requestor has to allege under II(A)(6)(a), II(B)(7)(A), and II(C)(6)(A).  As a way of bridging the current gap that we’ve got, that seems reasonable to me: if the language is good for the Requestor, why wouldn’t it be good going the other way?  Or, to put it another way: why would that language “seem a little ambiguous and hard to prove” going one way but not the other?

I agree with you that we don’t want a lot of additional work and discussion at this point.  I guess where I disagree with you is on which of the two options that is on the table – 1) fighting it out b/w “compelling” and “adequate” or 2) incorporating language that we’ve agreed to elsewhere – is more likely to lead to additional work and discussion.

TW.

From: gnso-ppsai-pdp-wg-bounces at icann.org<mailto:gnso-ppsai-pdp-wg-bounces at icann.org> [mailto:gnso-ppsai-pdp-wg-bounces at icann.org] On Behalf Of Kathy Kleiman
Sent: Wednesday, April 15, 2015 10:02 AM
To: gnso-ppsai-pdp-wg at icann.org<mailto:gnso-ppsai-pdp-wg at icann.org>
Subject: Re: [Gnso-ppsai-pdp-wg] PPSAI - suggestions for III.B, C, and E

Hi Val,
Thank you for new language as we work to close the report for publication. May I ask a few questions?

In III.B.2 - the change from [existing] (2)  state to Requestor in writing or by electronic communication its reasons for refusing to disclose to
[new/proposed] (2) state to Requestor in writing or by electronic communication its the specific reasons for refusing to disclose --

seems to raise the bar on the response of the Provider to the Requestor -- and there may be many Requests!  So let me as, what are you thinking of in terms of the "specific reasons" that a Provider might have to give?  How extensive or detailed would you like their answers to be?


Re: III.C.2 and 3 I think the existing language is quite good -- with apologies, because I know the genuine good will in which the changes are offered, bringing in a Customer's "belief" and the Providers "belief" seems a little ambiguous and hard to prove.

I look forward to looking at III.B.2 with you... but re: III.B.3, I think we had pretty good agreement on the existing language and these new proposals may result is a lot of additional work and discussion.

Best,
Kathy
1.

On 4/14/2015 4:12 PM, Sherman, Valeriya wrote:
PPSAI Team:

Given that we are getting ready to publish the initial report, we’d like to propose the following, hopefully non-contentious suggestions to III.B, C, and E.

We look forward to your thoughts.

B.            …


(1)                …

(2)                state to Requestor in writing or by electronic communication its the specific reasons for refusing to disclose.

(3)                …

C.            Disclosure can be reasonably refused, for reasons consistent with the general policy stated herein, including, but not limited to any of the following:


(1)                …

(2)                the Customer has objectsed to the disclosure and has providesd [adequate sufficient] reasons against disclosure, including without limitation a reasonable defense for its use of the trademark or copyrighted content in question for believing (i) that it is not infringing the Requestor’s claimed intellectual property rights, and/or (ii) that its use of the claimed intellectual property is defensible;

(Note: This language tracks the Requestor’s standards warranting disclosure, and is the opposite side of the same coin.)

(3)                the Provider has found provides [adequate sufficient] reasons against disclosure for believing (i) that the Customer is not infringing the Requestor’s claimed intellectual property rights, and/or (ii) that the Customer’s use of the claimed intellectual property is defensible;

(4)                …

(5)                …

…


E.       If refusal to disclose is based on objection to disclosure by the Customer, Requestor  be informed of the reasons for objection.  (Could be consolidated with III B (2)).




Valeriya  Sherman<http://www.sgrlaw.com/attorneys/profiles/sherman-valeriya/> | Attorney at Law


202-973-2611 phone
202-263-4326 fax
www.sgrlaw.com<http://www.sgrlaw.com>
vsherman at sgrlaw.com<mailto:vsherman at sgrlaw.com>


1055 Thomas Jefferson Street, N.W.
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Washington, D.C. 20007


Ms. Sherman's practice is limited to matters before federal courts and before the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
She is not admitted in the District of Columbia.




[cid:image001.jpg at 01D07827.84BA1670]<http://www.sgrlaw.com> Smith, Gambrell & Russell, LLP

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