[Gnso-ppsai-pdp-wg] A comment from 46 organizations and 105 individuals
Kathy Kleiman
kathy at kathykleiman.com
Thu Sep 24 16:58:28 UTC 2015
Hi All,
On the matter we are discussing involving financial transaction and
differentiation, a comment comes to mind that merits some additional
attention from the WG. Like the DBP and ROP comments, this is part of
the outpouring of individuals and organizations commenting in our
proceeding from whome ICANN does not normally hear from (with one noted
exception below).
The detailed comment was signed by 105 individuals, incl Cory Doctorow,
Bruce Schneider, Wendy Seltzer, Emily Lindin (The UnSlut Project),
Kendra Albert (Berkman Center), Jonathan Zittrain, Nadia Kayyali (EFF)
and many leaders in many women’s and electronic organizations plus 46
organizations, the National Center on Domestic and Sexual Violence,
National Coalition Against Domestic Violence, National Council of
Women’s Organizations, Women's Media Center, Women's Media Center Women
Under Seize, ACCESS, Ada Initiative, and coalitions against domestic
violence in Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, New York, North Caroline, Virginia
and Wyoming. The letter strongly opposes the commercial/noncommercial
distinction and emphatically states that "[e]ven the most limited
definition of a 'website handling online financial transactions for
commercial purpose' will encompass a wide population that could be
severely harmed by doxing" giving powerful examples.
I include the link and full text below for your review... and appreciate
all who commented in our proceeding.
http://forum.icann.org/lists/comments-ppsai-initial-05may15/msg11319.html
Best,
Kathy
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers:
We are an alliance of digital rights groups, anti-harassment
initiatives, media advocacy groups, women’s rights organizations, and
private individuals.
We are writing to you about the Initial Report on the Privacy & Proxy
Services published on May 5th, which proposes requiring “commercial
website” owners to display their address under their WHOIS data. Broadly
defined, this prevents millions of site owners from safeguarding their
private information. We strongly oppose the Working Group’s proposal,
which will physically endanger many domain owners and disproportionately
impact those who come from marginalized communities. People perceived to
be women, nonwhite, or LGBTQ are often targeted for harassment, and such
harassment inflicts significant harm.The endemic nature of inequity
online is a matter of deep concern for all of us, as we are working to
make the Internet a safe and accessible place for all voices.
The proposal in front of ICANN would radically undermine progress in
that direction, in part by making it far easier to dox domain owners.
"Doxing" is the malicious practice of obtaining someone's personal
information (e.g. home address, phone number, etc) and making that
information more readily and widely available. Doxing makes possible a
wide range of crowdsourced harassment and intimidation, which includes
everything from unwanted pizza deliveries to unrelenting barrages of
rape- and death threats. Doxing also enables "swatting," or calling in
false tips that send a fully armed SWAT team crashing through a targeted
person's door. Public online directories give doxers, swatters, and
stalkers alike easy access to their targets' personal information.
Our concern about doxing is not hypothetical. Randi Harper, a
technologist, anti-harassment activist, and founder of the Online Abuse
Prevention Initiative, was swatted based on information obtained from
the WHOIS record for her domain. The only reason law enforcement did not
draw their weapons and break down Harper's door was that she had
previously warned her local police department about swatting.
Even the most limited definition of a "website handling online financial
transactions for commercial purpose" will encompass a wide population
that could be severely harmed by doxing, such as:
*
women indie game developers who sell products through their own
online stores
*
freelance journalists and authors who market their work online
*
small business owners who run stores or businesses from their homes
*
activists who take donations to fund their work, especially those
living under totalitarian regimes
*
people who share personal stories online to crowdfund medical procedures
To make things worse, the proposed definition of what constitutes
"commercial purpose" could be expanded to include other types of
activity such as running ads or posting affiliate links.
If implemented, the current proposal will chill speech—especially speech
from people who lack access to lavish legal resources. It will be a
generous gift both to harassers and to oppressive regimes. It will curb
economic activity by adding untenable risk to using a website to promote
one’s business or to collect donations, and may even add this risk to
hosting ads. Women, people of color, and members of other marginalized
communities, who are the most frequent targets of doxing, will be forced
to take costly, speech-restrictive steps in order to protect themselves.
The WHOIS system is, in the words of ICANN’s own Expert Working Group on
gTLD Directory Services, “widely regarded as ‘broken,’”but the proposed
change will make WHOIS even worse. The proposal leaves domain owners
with three options:
*
accept the risk of having their home address available to all
*
pay for a P.O. box—although that option is not available in every
region or country
*
falsify their address information
Falsified information, however, puts domain owners at risk of having
their domains terminated for breaching their registrars' terms of
service. Because the remaining options are either "public" or "pay,"
domain owners who are targets or potential targets of harassment have a
safety tax levied upon them. While some registrars currently charge a
fee to withhold personal information from WHOIS, the current proposal
will make an already-undue burden even more burdensome.
Although the working group stakeholders' concerns about being able to
verify consumer transactions and find information about businesses are
valid, we did not find any evidence that Internet users are having
difficulty getting information about businesses because of privacy and
proxy services. Further, law enforcement agencies and copyright-holders
are already able to access this information through existing legal
processes. The unclear merits of this proposal cannot outweigh the
inevitable harm that will follow from making millions of website owners’
personal information public. Even an ICANN working group recognized (in
2013) that in cases “where identification of speakers would cause a
threat to their lives or those of their families,” individuals should be
entitled to heightened privacy protection.
We strongly recommend that the proposed policy not be adopted. We
further recommend that ICANN revisit its own findings from 2013 and move
toward making WHOIS privacy the default for everyone. We believe that
ICANN should not be complicit in making doxing, stalking, & swatting any
easier than they already are. While ICANN certainly did not set out to
exacerbate online harassment, that will ultimately be the result of this
policy.
Signed,
Individually:
Kendra Albert, Berkman Center for Internet & Society*
Katherine Cross, CUNY Graduate Center*
Nadia Kayyali, Electronic Frontier Foundation
Randi Harper, Online Abuse Prevention Initiative
Sarah Jeong
Whitney Erin Boesel, Berkman Center for Internet & Society and MIT
Center for Civic Media*
Aaron Johnson, Computer Scientist
Alicia Liu, Software Engineer
Alison Macrina, Library Freedom Project
Amanda Palmer
Amber Yust
Andi McClure, Indie Game Developer
Andrea Horbinski, Organization for Transformative Works
Andrew Losowsky
Anil Dash, ThinkUp*
Anita Sarkeesian, Feminist Frequency
Anna Kreider
Annalee Flower Horne, Activist and Small Business Owner
Arthur Chu
Ashley Judd
Azure Jane Lunatic, Anti-spam Volunteer at Dreamwidth*
Brianna Wu, Giant Spacekat*
Bruce Schneier, Berkman Center for Internet and Society*
Camille M. François, Berkman Center for Internet and Society*
Caroline Sinders, Researcher/activist
Charles Nesson
Chris Kluwe
Christine Love
Claudio Guarnieri, Centre for Internet and Human Rights*
Coraline Ada Ehmke, contributor—covenant.org*
Cory Doctorow, Happy Mutants, LLC*
Cynthia Fraser, Safety Net Canada*
Dan Gillmor
Dana Mangum, Executive Director, North Carolina Coalition Against
Domestic Violence
Danielle Keats Citron, University of Maryland Francis King Carey School
of Law*
David Goulet, The Tor Project
David M. Perry
David Mirza Ahmad, Subgraph*
Emily Lindin, The UnSlut Project
Erika Smith
Erinn Clark, The Tor Project
Ethan Zuckerman, Center for Civic Media, MIT*
Faruk Ateş, Modernizr.js*
Fiona Barnett, HASTAC and Duke University*
Griffin Boyce
Helen Jamieson
Harmony Rodriguez, Writer and Anti-violence Activist
Harper Reed, Modest, Inc*
Heidi Tandy, FYeahCopyright*
Holly Jacobs, Cyber Civil Rights Initiative*
Izzy Galvez, GWhois.org*
J. Nathan Matias, MIT Center for Civic Media*
Jack Cushman, Berkman Center for Internet and Society*
Jaclyn Friedman
Jacob Hoffman-Andrews, Block Together*
Jacob Kaplan-Moss, Salesforce.com*
Jacqueline Wernimont
Jessica Moreno
Jonathan Zittrain
Joseph Reagle
Kanane Jones, Indie Game Developer
Kate Krauss, The Tor Project
Katherine J. Mack
Laura Bates, Writer and Founder, EverydaySexism *
Laura Poitras, Praxis Films *
Leigh Honeywell
Lili_Anaz, Laboratorio de Interconectividades
Lisa Nakamura, Gwendolyn Calvert Baker Collegiate Professor, University
of Michigan, Ann Arbor*
Liz Henry
Lynn Harris, Feminist Journalist and Essayist
Marcia Hofmann, Attorney
Mary Anne Franks, University of Miami School of Law*
Maryam Namazie, One Law for All*
Matt Haughey, MetaFilter*
Mehves Evin, Milliyet newspaper, Turkey*
Mel Chua
Melissa Elliott
Michael Curry
Michelle McNeil
Nico Sell, The Wickr Foundation
Nima Fatemi, Technologist/activist
Nóirín "Trouble" Plunkett, Simply Secure*
Renee Davidson, Writer
Rey Junco, Iowa State University/Berkman Center for Internet and Society*
Richard M. Stallman, Free Software Foundation*
Risa Goodman
Robert Faris, Berkman Center for Internet and Society*
Runa A. Sandvik, Security Researcher
Sands Fish, Harvard University*
Sara Williamson
Sarah Agudo, Medium*
Selena Deckelmann, Open Source Programmer
Sheri Rubin, Design Direct Deliver*
Soraya Chemaly, The Women’s Media Center Speech Project*
Sue Gardner
Tarleton Gillespie, Microsoft Research New England*
Thorlaug Agustsdottir, Pirate Party, Reykjavik*
Toiya Kristen Finley, Writer
Tom Leckrone, The Tor Project
Urs Gasser
Valerie Aurora, Ada Initiative
Vivian Brown
Wendy Seltzer, Board Member, The Tor Project
Willow Brugh, Berkman Center for Internet and Society*
Zoe Quinn, Crash Override Network
Organizations:
ACCESS
Arizona Coalition to End Sexual and Domestic Violence
Ada Initiative
Black Girl Dangerous Press
bolwerK
Breakthrough
Chayn
Crash Override Network
Dangerous Speech Project
Electronic Frontier Foundation
End Domestic Abuse WI
Feminist Frequency
Fight for the Future
Free Software Foundation
Illinois Coalition Against Domestic Violence
Iowa Coalition Against Domestic Violence
Internet Democracy Project, India
Jewish Women International
Laboratorio de Interconectividades
National Alliance to End Sexual Violence
National Center on Domestic and Sexual Violence
National Coalition Against Domestic Violence
National Council of Women's Organizations
National Domestic Violence Hotline
National Network to End Domestic Violence
National Resource Center on Domestic Violence
Nebraska Coalition to End Sexual and Domestic Violence
Net Family News Inc.
New York State Coalition Against Domestic Violence
North Carolina Coalition Against Domestic Violence
Online Abuse Prevention Initiative
Organization for Transformative Works
Peng! Collective
Renewable Freedom Foundation
Sonic
Stop Street Harassment
Subgraph
The Tor Project
The UnSlut Project
The Wickr Foundation
Virginia Sexual and Domestic Violence Action Alliance
Women’s Media Center Women Under Siege
Women’s Media Center Speech Project
Women, Action and The Media
Women’s Media Center
Wyoming Coalition Against Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault
*Organizational affiliation listed for identification purposes only
____
*
--
Nadia Kayyali
Activist
415.436.9333 ext 104
Electronic Frontier Foundation
https://eff.org
815 Eddy Street
San Francisco, CA 94109-7701
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