[SubPro-ODP] Question Set #1

Jeff Neuman jeff at jjnsolutions.com
Fri Nov 19 16:09:19 UTC 2021


Thanks Karen for these questions.  To provide you a quick update and to make sure it is on the public list:


  *   Shortly after receiving these questions, I sent GNSO Council Leadership a copy of these questions;
  *   And within a couple of hours I also sent GNSO Council Leadership proposed responses which was subsequently sent to the GNSO Council mailing list at https://mm.icann.org/pipermail/council/2021-November/025220.html.
  *   I believe that the GNSO Leadership and Council are coming up with a process to respond to these questions and we will communicate that to you as soon as that process is developed.

In the meantime, I was asked whether the submission of the this first set of questions meant that the ODP was now formally kicked off and we are no longer in the preparatory phase.  If the answer is yes, then that would be great to document that as of November 17, 2021 the ODP was kicked off.  Or if that is not correct, is there some event or some formal way that we will have to designate the start of the ODP?

Thanks in advance for your attention to this matter.  I am always available for any questions or comments and look forward to our first official kick-off call on the 30th.  Have a happy Thanksgiving.

Sincerely,

Jeffrey Neuman
GNSO Liaison to the SubPro ODP

[cid:image001.png at 01D7DD35.E49B57F0]
Jeffrey J. Neuman
Founder & CEO
JJN Solutions, LLC
p: +1.202.549.5079
E: jeff at jjnsolutions.com<mailto:jeff at jjnsolutions.com>
http://jjnsolutions.com


From: Karen Lentz <karen.lentz at icann.org>
Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 2021 4:56 PM
To: Jeff Neuman <jeff at jjnsolutions.com>
Cc: SubPro ODP Mailman List <subpro-odp at icann.org>; Steve Chan <steve.chan at icann.org>
Subject: Question Set #1

Dear Jeff,

I hope this note finds you well. While, as you know, the Board resolution provided for an approximate 3-month period of internal project organization prior to beginning the substantive work of the Operational Design Phase (ODP), we have in the course of our work already identified some preliminary questions. I wanted to share and convey these questions to you, as GNSO Council Liaison. This set of questions mostly concerns areas where we are trying to reconcile recommendations across topics and looking for confirmation as to whether our assumptions are correct, to ensure the ODP assessment is based on the correct understanding of the recommendations. As the GNSO Council Liaison, we ask that you please relay our understanding to obtain the Council’s verification and/or feedback as appropriate and provide a response when available.

Thank you also for completing the scheduling poll for the introductory call in your role as GNSO Council Liaison. As we make progress on the ODP in the coming months, the project team will engage with you if any questions or issues arise regarding the substance or intent of any of the SubPro policy recommendations. In the meantime, please do not hesitate to reach out to the team at subpro-odp at icann.org<mailto:subpro-odp at icann.org>. For transparency, our email correspondence is published on our SubPro ODP webpage at https://www.icann.org/subpro-odp. On behalf of the ICANN org SubPro ODP team, thank you for volunteering to support this important process. We look forward to working with you.

Thank you
Karen

=

Questions

Topic 3:  Applications Assessed in Rounds


  1.  Implementation Guidance 3.4.  ICANN org would like to confirm its assumption that the particular terms used [regarding application status] can potentially be changed based upon need during implementation and remain consistent with the Implementation Guidance.
  2.  Recommendation 3.6.  Recommendation 3.6 appears to envision that ICANN org would open an application round, process the applications, and then open another round, while a Competition, Consumer Trust & Consumer Choice (CCT) review on the former would take place concurrently with the latter.  Is this assumption correct?  If so, how is this intended to interact with the Bylaws provision 4.6(d) which indicates that the CCT Review Team identifies recommendations that “must be implemented before opening subsequent rounds”?

Notes

  *   Section 4.6(d) of the Bylaws includes:
(ii) After a New gTLD Round has been in operation for one year, the Board shall cause a competition, consumer trust and consumer choice review as specified in this Section 4.6(d) ("CCT Review").
(iii) The review team for the CCT Review ("CCT Review Team") will examine (A) the extent to which the expansion of gTLDs has promoted competition, consumer trust and consumer choice and (B) the effectiveness of the New gTLD Round's application and evaluation process and safeguards put in place to mitigate issues arising from the New gTLD Round.
(iv) For each of its recommendations, the CCT Review Team should indicate whether the recommendation, if accepted by the Board, must be implemented before opening subsequent rounds of new generic top-level domain applications periods.

  *   The above section of the Bylaws is expected to be updated by ATRT3 Recommendation 3.2, which provides that “There should be one additional and clearly scoped CCT Review. - It shall start within the two years after the first introduction of the (possible) next round of new gTLDs to the root. - It should be limited to a duration of one year. - Additionally, a framework of data collection must be in place prior to the next round of gTLDs and the availability of all data sets should be confirmed prior to the selection of the review members and must be provided within 30 days of the review being launched."  This recommendation has been accepted but is not yet implemented.

Topic 9:  Registry Voluntary Commitments / Public Interest Commitments


  1.  Recommendation 9.1.  The recommendation notes that “Mandatory Public Interest Commitments (PICs) currently captured in Specification 11 3(a)-(d) of the Registry Agreement must continue to be included in Registry Agreements for gTLDs in subsequent procedures. [...] this recommendation puts existing practice into policy.”

Maintaining Spec 11.3 (d) would prohibit closed generics during the immediate next round. Therefore, this recommendation seems to be in contradiction with the outcome of no-agreement that was reached by the SubPro PDP WG on Topic 23: Closed Generics.

This appears to be an oversight as the text for Topic 23 states that “Although the Working Group had numerous discussions about this topic, and received extensive comments from the community, including members of the Governmental Advisory Committee, the Working Group was not able to agree on ‘policy advice concerning exclusive generic TLDs.”  Is this a correct assumption?

Notes

  *   Registry Agreement Specification 11 3(d) specifies that:  “Registry Operator of a “Generic String” TLD may not impose eligibility criteria for registering names in the TLD that limit registrations exclusively to a single person or entity and/or that person’s or entity’s “Affiliates” (as defined in Section 2.9(c) of the Registry Agreement). “Generic String” means a string consisting of a word or term that denominates or describes a general class of goods, services, groups, organizations or things, as opposed to distinguishing a specific brand of goods, services, groups, organizations or things from those of others.”
  *   A similar question was flagged in org’s comments on the Draft Final Report:  “ICANN org also notes that Specification 11 3(d) is about prohibiting the use of a TLD in a closed manner. As the PDP WG continues to discuss the issue of closed generic TLDs into the subsequent rounds, we would note that, absent changes, this Recommendation to retain Specification 11 section 3(d) might conflict with the PDP WG’s ultimate Recommendation on the topic of closed generic TLDs.”


  1.  Recommendation 9.15. The recommendation noted that “the Working Group acknowledges ongoing important work in the community on the topic of DNS abuse and believes that a holistic solution is needed to account for DNS abuse in all gTLDs as opposed to dealing with these recommendations with respect to only the introduction of subsequent new gTLDs. In addition, recommending new requirements that would only apply to the new gTLDs added to the root in subsequent rounds could result in singling out those new gTLDs for disparate treatment in contravention of the ICANN Bylaws. Therefore, this PDP Working Group is not making any recommendations with respect to mitigating domain name abuse other than stating that any such future effort must apply to both existing and new gTLDs (and potentially ccTLDs).”

The GNSO Council review of the ICANN71 GAC communique noted that “the Subsequent Procedures and RPM PDPs have addressed many of the issues raised in the CCT Review Team (CCT-RT) Final Report that were referred from the ICANN Board to the GNSO. For the DNS abuse recommendations contained within the CCT-RT Final Report, the GNSO Council is still in the process of determining whether any policy work is needed, and if so, how that work will be carried out.”

Are there any further considerations from the GNSO on handling GAC advice on DNS abuse in the next round, or updates on whether such work is planned or will be carried out during the Operational Design Phase, so that this can be factored into our planning and assessment?

Topic 27:  Applicant Reviews


  1.  Implementation Guidance 27.16/27.17.  Implementation Guidance items 27.16 and 27.17 appear to be inconsistent with one another.  The guidance that ICANN “should not evaluate proposed business models" is difficult to reconcile with Implementation Guidance 27.17, which states, “the evaluation should determine whether an applicant will be able to withstand missing revenue goals, exceeding expenses, funding shortfalls, or the inability to manage multiple TLDs in the case of registries that are dependent upon the sale of registrations.”  To carry out IG 27.17, which also notes for instance that “....determining the financial wherewithal of an applicant to sustain the maintenance of a TLD may require different criteria for different types of registries; criteria should not be established in a ‘one-size-fits-all’ manner,” there seems to be a need to identify and consider the relevant business model as part of the evaluation.  Is this a possible oversight and if not, can you provide additional insight to how these two items should be read?

Topic 35:  Auctions:  Mechanisms of Last Resort / Private Resolution of Contention Sets

  1.  Recommendation 35.3.  The recommendation states that applications must be submitted with bona fide intention to operate, noting that if a string is not delegated within two (2) years of the effective date of the registry agreement, this may be a factor considered by ICANN in determining lack of bona fide intention to operate the gTLD for that applicant.  Affirmation 40.2, on TLD Rollout, supports maintaining the  timeframes for delegation and contracting used in the 2012 round, namely, 9 months to enter a registry agreement and entry of the TLD into the root zone within 12 months of the effective date of the registry agreement.  Our assumption is that the two years is a maximum, such that extensions exceeding that time may be a factor in determining lack of bona fide intention to operate the gTLD, and not that the delegation timeline for all applicants should be extended from one to two years.  Is this assumption correct?







-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://mm.icann.org/pipermail/subpro-odp/attachments/20211119/3b4db39b/attachment.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image001.png
Type: image/png
Size: 67520 bytes
Desc: image001.png
URL: <https://mm.icann.org/pipermail/subpro-odp/attachments/20211119/3b4db39b/image001.png>


More information about the SubPro-ODP mailing list