Showing posts with label Aftermarket. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aftermarket. Show all posts

2019-02-03

News Review | ICANN EPDP Dysfunction & Burnout, Report Delayed

graphic "News Review" ©2016 DomainMondo.com
Domain Mondo's weekly internet domain news review (NR 2019-02-03 with analysis and opinion: Features •  1) ICANN EPDP Dysfunction & Burnout, Report Delayed, 2) EPDP Meetings, 3) ICANNBelgium's DPA, 4) ACTO, ICANN & .AMAZON, 5) Dot COM Dominates Aftermarket, 6) ICYMI: Internet Freedom, Data Protection, Internet Shutdowns, Google Public Policy Fellowships, 7) Most Read.

UPDATE FEB 5: EPDP Schedule changes a) Final Report 'drop dead date' now Feb 25 (revised timeline embed below). b) EPDP Plenary Meetings this week changed to Tuesday Feb 5, Wednesday Feb 6, Thursday Feb 7, starting at 14:00 UTC (9am EST). Observers: Adobe Connect. More info at 2) below.

4 Feb 2019 Letter (pdf) from ICANN CEO Goran Marby to GNSO Council Chair Keith Drazek:

UPDATES Feb 3-4, 2019: 
EPDP Consensus Call #1 email from EPDP Chair Kurt Pritz with attachment embed below:

EPDP Consensus Call #2 email from EPDP Chair Kurt Pritz with attachment embed below:  

Original Post:
1. EPDP Dysfunction & Burnout, Final Report (Phase I) Delayed:
[GNSO-EPDP-Team mail list] "Extreme workload warning!"
"While I understand that we have a deadline to meet, and we do not wish to push any more work than absolutely necessary to the next phase of our WHOIS policy development, I would like to push back on the amount of activity that we are now expected to join over the next couple of weeks in order to push the EPDP final report over the finish line. Many of us have busy lives beyond ICANN, and cannot drop everything to attend 4 three hour plenary meetings a week, let alone the other small team meetings (and respond to the list). Given that we have achieved really only a modest level of consensus on our policy recommendations to date, I would like to register a very strong warning that we will not accept changes to the text that have not been agreed in full committee with full attendance. This appears to be a golden opportunity for those who are being paid to work full time on lobbying for certain outcomes, to insert or reinsert their favorite language into the text. In the name of maintaining the integrity of the multi-stakeholder process, flawed as it undoubtedly is, let us resist this and accept the fact that we cannot fix in our last couple of weeks what we lingered over for months."--Stephanie Perrin, EPDP member and NCSG Chair, EPDP Mail List, Jan 28, 2019.
"I’d like to echo Stephanie’s concerns ... After two weeks of being AWOL (ePDP Toronto and GNSO Los Angeles), my employer is anxious for me to turn my attention to my real job.  I will not be joining the additional sessions next week, nor do I recall our discussing or agreeing to this ask."--James Bladel, EPDP member (GoDaddy, RrSG), EPDP Mail List, Jan 28, 2019.
Hi James and everyone: I got it. I am at NamesCon and spent the ride to the airport this morning on a EPDP staff call and have been holed up in my room typing up legal issues since I arrived. I haven’t sold (or bought) a domain name yet. The additional sessions are not a requirement; invitations were sent as placeholders as a heads up, but there is no confirmation yet on whether we go ahead with these or whether they are needed. Let’s discuss the go-forward plan on the call tomorrow - although we might not have a Plan B in place by then - we can at least generate a joint understanding of status and final objective. Thanks (Stephanie and James) for this interjection. Best regards, Kurt [Pritz, EPDP Chair (appointed by the GNSO Council)] EPDP Mail List Jan 28, 2019.
EPDP Timeline as of Jan 28, 2019 (pdf) now REVISED as of Feb 4, embed below:

Updated Editor's note: the EPDP's "drop dead date" is Feb 11 25, 2019, for submission of the final report to the GNSO Council.

2) ICANN EPDP Meetings for Week Ending Feb 9, and Weekly Recap
Updated: EPDP Plenary Meetings are now scheduled for Tuesday Feb 5, Wednesday Feb 6, Thursday Feb 7,  Friday Feb 8, at 14:00 UTC (9am EST) (schedule subject to change).

Notes and action items from the Thursday, Feb 7, 2019, EPDP meeting here.

Observers may use Adobe Connect, or audiocast via browser / app. Links: Draft Final Report info, EPDP Initial Report (pdf) and public comments to the Initial Report; PCRT Public Comment Review Tool; GNSO Council EPDP page and updates; links to EPDP meeting transcripts and recordings are on the GNSO calendar. Other EPDP links: wiki; mail list; action items; Temp Spec; EPDP Charter (pdf); Data Elements Workbooks (pdf), packet (pdf) small team agreements, ICANN's legal memo on Controllership (pdf), Bird & Bird legal memos are here.

EPDP recap for week ending Feb 2: Jan 29 EPDP meeting wiki page and Jan 31 EPDP meeting wiki page, notes and action items here; Legal committee Jan 30, and Data Elements group Jan 29 (5 EPDP team members + Pritz) and Jan 31 (4 EPDP team members + Pritz).

The Most Important EPDP development has been the legal advice provided by Ruth Boardman, Bird & Bird, to the select few members of the EPDP "legal committee" but finally made available to the full EPDP working group on Friday, Feb 1, 2019, here and here (note: more legal advice may be forthcoming). So far, the EPDP team has been advised:
  • relevant parties could be subject to liability if a registrant wrongly self-identifies as a legal person (and not a natural person) and the registrant's data is disclosed in reliance on this self-identification;
  • where the RNH [registrant] and the technical contact are not the same person, relying on the RNH to provide notice on the registrar's behalf will not meet GDPR's notice requirements if the RNH fails to provide the notice;
  • it is not clear if the contractual necessity condition [GDPR Article 6(1)(b)] can only apply where there is a contract between data controller and data subject;
  • "What is 'necessary' is interpreted strictly. We do not think that the EPDP could successfully argue that preventing DNS abuses is 'necessary' for the contract with the RNH" [registrant]. 

More info on Jan 29 and 31 EPDP meetings on last week's News Review, but the following from the Jan 29 transcript (pp. 54-57)  gives an indication of what's going on:
Milton Mueller: "As I said, I think we need to clarify with the legal counsel whether ICANN can, as controller, and ICANN needs to decide whether it’s a controller here of course, but assuming it is, then the fact that it doesn’t have the data doesn’t necessarily mean that it can request it if [it] is the controller, so we need legal advice on that and whether that’s actually – needs a distinctive purpose. But, you know, that’s not a third party access issue under any construction, that’s ICANN getting data about its own system and doing research on it, which we support but we don't want it in Purpose 2."
Kurt Pritz: Thanks, Milton. Alan, go ahead – Alan Greenberg. 
Alan Greenberg: "Yes, thank you. I misspoke before when I said it could go into Purpose 2; I’d forgotten that Purpose 2 is third parties right now so it cannot be Purpose 2. ICANN under no conditions is a third party. We can fix it, however, either by adding a new purpose or simply modifying Purpose 2 to say to third parties for legitimate lawful purposes, or to ICANN, and then add a processing activity for it. So we could make Purpose 2 apply to ICANN as well if people – if that’s offensive to people then it probably has to be a new purpose not because we need a purpose for ICANN doing the processing of the data but to ensure that it can be sent to ICANN. So it’s not the processing that’s the purpose, it’s the transmission to ICANN that we have to ensure is enshrined in some purpose. So we can fix 2 by adding ICANN as an Other recipient in addition to third parties. I can't see anywhere else it fits. I wouldn’t want to put it into 5 because 5 is very much a compliance one and this is not a compliance issue. Thank you."
Kurt Pritz: Thanks, Alan. ....
Farzaneh Badii: "Thank you, Kurt. Farzaneh speaking. So I think that we are really getting confused because we keep repeating and digging up issues that – and questions that we have responded to multiple times ..." [Editor's note: and so it goes.]
3) Status of ICANN’s exchanges with Belgium's Data Protection Authority (DPA)
Excerpt from 27 Jan 2019 Letter from ICANN GDD Cyrus Namazi (pdf)  
Video interview with Willem DebeuckelaerePresident of Belgium's DPA, at European Data Protection Days in Berlin in May 2018:

More info at: edpd-conference.com. Editor's note: ICANN has its sole EU office in Brussels, Belgium, and therefore Belgium's Data Protection Authority (DPA).is the "lead supervisory authority" over ICANN, stated Mr. Debeuckelaere in his letter, adding: 
"Finally, I wish to note that the GDPR places responsibility for compliance with the provisions of the GDPR upon the (joint) controller(s). It does not provide for a system of prior consultation, except in the case of article 36. It also does not foresee the possibility of prior approval, except in the cases mentioned by articles 40 (codes of conduct) and 47 (binding corporate rules)." 
See also:
"Use of WHOIS Data .... We also have some concerns about whether the practice of having the DAAR collection system query registration data is compliant with GDPR and other privacy regulations. Such queries would require a disclosure of personal data that has not previously been contemplated and could have significant repercussions for both registry operators and ICANN."--gTLD Registries Stakeholder Group (RySG) comments (link above) (emphasis added).

4) Other ICANN News: ACTO, ICANN & .AMAZON
graphic "ICANN | Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers"
28 January 2019 Letter (pdf) from Alexandra Moreira Lopez, Secretary General, Amazon Cooperation Treaty Organization (ACTO), to GAC Chair Manal Ismail re: New gTLD Applications for .AMAZON:

5) Names, Domains & Trademarks: Dot COM Dominates Aftermarket
graphic "Names, Domains & Trademarks" ©2017 DomainMondo.com
GoDaddy 2019 aftermarket domain trends and NamesCon keynote | slideshare.net excerpt:

6) ICYMI Internet Domain News: Internet Freedom, Data Protection, Internet Shutdowns and Google Public Policy Fellowships
graphic "ICYMI Internet Domain News" ©2017 DomainMondo.com
Has the internet afforded humans more freedom, or less?--Social-Media Outrage Is Collapsing Our Worlds--The internet once made it easier to slip from one domain to another. Is there a way to preserve that vital freedom?--theatlantic.com.

Google and IAB ad category lists show ‘massive leakage of highly intimate data,’ GDPR complaint claims--techcrunch.com.

Ireland questions Facebook’s plan to merge Messenger, Instagram, and WhatsApp--previous data-sharing proposals have ‘given rise to significant data protection concerns’--theverge.com.

Dr Paul Vixie, Farsight Security, on pushing back against cyber criminals--Tech Radio via Soundcloud.com.

African governments use internet shutdowns to silence opposition more and more--what can people do?--euronews.com. See also Zimbabwe President Mnangagwa Justifies Internet Shut Down, Although “He Deeply Believes In Freedom Of Speech And Expression”--techzim.co.zw.

Venezuela: The Committee to Protect Journalists have called on Venezuelan authorities to stop blocking news outlets and to ensure that access to the internet is available amid the country's political crisis and widespread protests--cpj.org.

Applications are open for the Google North America Public Policy Fellowship--all applications must be received by 12:00 p.m. EST, Friday, February, 15th. More information about Google Public Policy Fellowships, including in Latin America, Europe, Middle East, and Africahere.

7) Most Read this past week on DomainMondo.com: 
graphic "Domain Mondo" ©2017 DomainMondo.com



-- John Poole, Editor  Domain Mondo 

feedback & comments via twitter @DomainMondo


DISCLAIMER

2016-01-13

GoDaddy $GDDY Launches Mobile App For Domain Name Investors

GoDaddy announced today a new App which "brings real-time bidding and monitoring on GoDaddy Auctions to mobile devices, Android and Apple iOS"--

GoDaddy Investor v 1.0 is now available on iPhone and iPad (iOS 8 and above) and Android phones (4.1 and above) in English-speaking markets.

From the GoDaddy announcement:

GoDaddy [NYSE:GDDY], which operates the world's largest domain name aftermarket, today announces the launch of its first mobile app for domain investors. The GoDaddy Investor app, launching on iOS and Android, will allow investors to watch and bid on domains at auction and stay on top of their current bids all from their mobile device. Aftermarket domain auctions are time-sensitive and highly competitive, and it's critical that investors are able to easily participate at any time and from anywhere, not just from their computers.

GoDaddy Investor offers several additional features not previously available. After downloading the app, domain investors are able to monitor a watch list of active expiry domain auctions in real time, as well as view their bidding history. Investors can also see the auction history for each domain, including the number of bidders and the prices of their bids. Investors can also place proxy bids and securely re-authenticate with their Auction PIN (Android, iOS) or Touch ID (iOS). A streamlined, visual dashboard count shows, at-a-glance, how many auctions investors have won, bid on, or are watching overall. Finally, since auctions are won and lost in an instant, push notifications will immediately alert investors when they've been outbid on auctions that are ending soon.

"We worked closely with our domain investors to bring the same great investing experience to mobile that they've enjoyed on desktop for years," said Paul Nicks,GoDaddy's Senior Director of Aftermarket. "The new GoDaddy Investor app was designed with the timely nature of domain bids in mind, allowing investors to register valuable pre-owned domain names, win more auctions and keep a closer eye on their bids, no matter where they are."




DISCLAIMER

2014-11-06

Web.Com Group Stock Tanks, New gTLDs Kill Domains Aftermarket

Web.com Group Inc. Stock Chart
Web.com Group Inc. Stock Chart (source: Marketwatch.com)
Today Web.com Group (NASDAQ:WWWW) stock is tanking (see above, source: Marketwatch).
UPDATE--at market close 6Nov2014: WWWW $14.71  -5.54 (-27.33%) [source:Seeking Alpha] while overall the NASDAQ closed up +17.75 +0.38% at 4,638.47 (source: Bloomberg).

Web.com Group operates various brands in the domain name industry including registrars web.com, networksolutions.com, and register.com.

Yesterday afternoon (5 Nov 2014), Web.com Group (NASDAQ:WWWW) presented its Q3 2014 Results in a conference call. Excerpts below (emphasis added) from Web.com Group's (WWWW) CEO David Brown on Q3 2014 Results - 5 Nov 2014 Earnings Call Transcript | Seeking Alpha [my "translation" appears within brackets below]

David L. Brown - Web.com Group Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President: "First, in the domain business, while we continue to expect the recently expanded top-level domain environment to increase our ability to sell domains over the medium to long term, the increased availability of names has had a near-term negative impact on domain-related revenue. This is primarily associated with noncore domain-related revenue such as sales of premium domain names and bulk domain sales. While not a significant part of our overall domain business, it has historically represented several million dollars of quarterly revenue. But given the current environment, we now expect minimal contribution in the coming quarter." 

[Translation: Since ICANN's new gTLDs (new generic Top-Level Domains) came out, the domain name business has been bad, but medium to long term we hope it will get better.]

David L. Brown - Web.com Group Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President: There's a marketplace out in the U.S. and around the world that buys domains and resells them or monetizes them, and we've seen that market get soft. We actually commented on this in our second quarter call that we were beginning to see softness. We saw it continue to soften further. Our belief is the reason the softness is occurring is that this marketplace is looking at all of these new gTLDs coming into place, i.e., there are more options available for people and they're kind of stepping back away, at least temporarily, to see how things settle out. We continue to believe that this market could come back. But for the sake of conservatism, we have effectively taken this revenue out of our model for the fourth quarter because we can't predict how long this behavior is going to continue.

[Translation: Web.com Group (web.com, networksolutions.com, register.com) does not expect to make any money in domain name aftermarket sales due to the chaos and confusion caused by the current launch of over 1300 new gTLDs by ICANN, which is causing domain name investors to become cautious and the market to go "soft."]

Gray Powell - Wells Fargo Securities, LLC, Research Division: "So on the domain name side, I just want to make sure that I have it correct. So specifically, you're saying that new gTLDs are impacting the resale of domain names in the aftermarket. Is that right?"

David L. Brown - Web.com Group Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President: "That's our belief at this point. When we commented in the second quarter, it was just beginning to impact us, and we really didn't understand it at that point. Upon investigation and discussion with some of the purchasers in the marketplace, we see a much more cautious attitude in the marketplace. And we just believe that demand has softened, which leads us to believe that people have kind of -- are taking a wait-and-see attitude relative to this new phenomenon of gTLDs and the new opportunities they create."

[Tanslation: "Opportunities" means "problems and financial pitfalls," i.e., the new gTLDs are BAD NEWS for almost everyone: trademark holders, law enforcement, consumers, the domain name industry (see above), as well as domain name registrants and investors. It's called "flooding the market" and creating gross oversupply or a "glut," which leads to commoditizing (falling prices) and a shakeout in the industry with a few well-capitalized big operators (Google and Amazon?) eventually controlling marketshare. The premium extensions .COM and well-run ccTLDs should weather the storm and maintain and continue to increase in value over the long-term, but do not expect savvy domain name investors to follow the new gTLDs over the cliff. There are plenty of .COM and ccTLD domain names available--we were never "running out of .COM domain names" and ICANN never considered "consumer demand" as a relevant factor in whether to create more gTLD domain name extensions. ICANN just decided to "glut" the market "because they can" and because it would make a "lot of money" for ICANN, at least in the short term.]

See also: WWWW: The Greatest Stock Promotion Story Ever Told | Stocks and Dollars: "...This company is engaged in an unattractive low-growth commodity business of selling domain names...." and  We're doing great, say [new gTLD] dot-London chiefs ... Unfortunately, few agree • The Register




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