Showing posts with label Comments. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Comments. Show all posts

2016-08-19

ICANN Staff Report on Comments Re: Amendments to Base New gTLD RA

"ICANN has always been and will continue to be subject to antitrust laws" --Larry Strickling, NTIA, July 14, 2016, ICANN, NTIA, IANA Transition, Fundamental Problems, the Macro View | DomainMondo.com
At this rate, some plaintiff antitrust law firms are going to get rich off arrogant ICANN and its new gTLD "partners," after September 30, 2016. And I'm sure Jones Day will gladly defend ICANN, to its last dollar!--from Comment submitted by John Poole, Editor, Domain Mondo
Embedded below is the ICANN Staff Report on public comments received on the Proposed Amendments to Base New gTLD Registry Agreement. 22 comments were received, including the comment by the Editor of Domain Mondo (pdf). See also on Domain Mondo

As set forth in the report, next steps are:
ICANN and the [Registry Operators] Working Group will consider and analyze the public comments. Once that analysis is concluded, ICANN and the Working Group will submit the proposed final version of the amendments for Registry Operator approval (according to the process defined in Section 7.6) and approval by the ICANN Board of Directors. If these approvals are obtained, the amendment will become effective upon 60 days’ notice from ICANN to the Registry Operators.
ICANN Staff Report (pdf) on Public Comments re: Proposed Amendments to Base New gTLD Registry Agreement (embed below, highlighting added):


feedback & comments via twitter @DomainMondo


DISCLAIMER

2016-05-23

Comments from China and India on Draft New ICANN Bylaws

The public comment period on Draft New ICANN Bylaws closed Saturday, May 21, 2016, at 23:59 UTC. A total of 31 comments were received (as published on ICANN's website).

On Friday, May 27, 2016, the ICANN Board of Directors is expected to approve and adopt a revised final draft of the bylaws, after taking into consideration the comments received, and forward same to NTIA, which is currently considering the IANA stewardship transition proposal forwarded by the ICANN Board to NTIA in March, 2016. The changes to ICANN's Bylaws are a necessary component of the implementation of the IANA transition.

While most of the comments submitted are worth taking the time to read, the following two comments, submitted from China and India, respectively, merit careful reading (emphasis added):

Institute of Internet Governance Research (IGR)(CNNIC)(China), comment below:


Centre for Internet and Society (India) comment below:





DISCLAIMER

2016-04-24

News Review: ICANN Bylaws, Comments, ICANN Chairman's Op-ed Flops

DomainMondoShiningLight ©2013domainmondo.com All Rights Reserved
Domain Mondo's review of the past week and look ahead [pdf of this post here]:

The implentation phase of the IANA Stewardship Transition Plan (including WS1 of Enhancing ICANN Accountability) is proceeding in accord with the tentative timeline:

IANA Stewardship Transition Tentative Timeline
IANA Stewardship Transition Tentative Timeline
ICANN's new proposed bylaws in connection with the IANA transition and ICANN accountability proposal, have been posted for public comment through May 21, 2016. Read more at: ICANN Posts Draft of New Bylaws For Public Comment Until May 21 | DomainMondo.com.

•  On April 19, the Wall Street Journal published an op-ed by ICANN Board Chairman Steve Crocker, warning of terrible consequences if the U.S. government (NTIA) does not end its oversight of the IANA functions:
Broadening the Oversight of a Free and Open Internet - WSJ: "... If the U.S. does not transition its stewardship role to the global Internet community, then other governments may try to move control to organizations like the United Nations. There is also a risk that some governments may form their own national or regional networks. This disruptive splintering would damage the economy and weaken personal Internet use ..." (emphasis added)
Crocker, like others involved in the IANA transition process from the beginning, including NTIA's Larry Strickling on March 14, 2014, is being disingenuous by using the phrase "global internet community" when he really means ICANN, the California corporation. The IANA stewardship transition is only about transitioning, or privatizing, the U.S. government's stewardship role from the U.S. to ICANN, not the global Internet community. The global Internet community is hardly the same as ICANN or even ICANN's "community," a fact acknowledged by ICANN and the "ICANN community" in setting up the ground rules for participation in the CCWG-Accountability (Cross Community Working Group to Enhance ICANN Accountability):
Members & Participants - Enhancing ICANN Accountability: "Anyone interested can volunteer to join the CCWG as a "participant," regardless of whether they are members of the ICANN community." (emphasis added)
Unlike the global Internet community, ICANN has largely been captured by domain name industry and other special interests. As far as Crocker's comment about "splintering" [or fragmentation] of the internet is concerned, that is already happening, due, in large part, to distrust of ICANN, its programs, policies, processes, structures, and leadership, by the global Internet community.

Crocker apparently forgot he was addressing readers of the Wall Street Journal, not a gathering of the UN's Internet Governance Forum or WSIS. His message would have been much better received had he simply been honest about the IANA transition, rather than using the false narrative of a transition to the "global Internet community." In fact, the Wall Street crowd would have probably warmly embraced the idea of a transition from 'U.S. government control' to 'control by ICANN,' a California corporation, which functions largely as a captured agency controlled by lobbyists and lawyers representing special interests, known as 'stakeholders' in the institutional jargon of ICANN, with the U.S. government retaining veto power over interference by foreign governments.

But Crocker followed the script he had been given, false narratives and institutional secrets are inculcated in ICANN's sick organizational culture. Besides being a misleading reference, the phrase "global Internet community" sounds to denizens of Wall Street like a rallying cry of the Trotskyite wing of #FeelTheBern. The Wall Street Journal readers' comments to Crocker's op-ed (more than 70 at last count), confirm this. While interesting and entertaining to read, particularly if one wants to know what that part of the global Internet community--the part that comprises the affluent demographic that subscribes to the Wall Street Journal--thinks about the IANA stewardship transition, there is a jarring brutal honesty in the comments for those accustomed to the rarefied air of the "ICANN bubble"--here are a few excerpts--
This is a typical political sales pitch; it tells us nothing about the features that supposedly will produce the claimed benefits, ignores legitimate concerns and glosses over all problem areas. Mr. Crocker missed his calling as a telemarketer ...
This is a totally misguided transformation. Mr. Crocker's last sentence to "assure that the Internet of tomorrow is as free, open and resilient as the Internet of today" should give us all pause about even contemplating the changes he and others propose. His proposal reminds me of a mentally ill patient, who, after using medication to restore his mental health, goes off his meds because "he is cured". As soon as the Commerce Department steps away, it will be open season on that openness and freedom by some of the darkest elements around the world, both corporate and governmental. The only reason the internet is free, open and resilient is that the US Government stands behind it. 
This article does not include a single supported assertion. Speaking on behalf of "the Internet community—along with businesses, civil society and other interest groups," I voice my dissent.
Mr. Crocker's column is a nice example of a buffoon using all the right words (diverse, accountable, community) to blow smoke up our 4th point of contact. When you want a technical activity managed properly, you don't care about diversity - that is for non-technical people looking to grab control of something. Then there are the questions Mr. Crocker doesn't answer: Example: accountable to whom? He never says specifically, just yada yada yada about an international community. Been there; done that. It's called the UN. Letting Russia, China or the UN anywhere near controlling anything about the internet guarantees only censorship. Even the Europe Union, with its silly "right to be forgotten" can't be trusted ... 
... I have to ask who elects people to the Board of ICANN? This guy [Crocker] is really an embarrassment, and should be removed forthwith ...
Not exactly the reaction and response Crocker was looking for, I'm sure. I'll leave the rest of the comments for your reading enjoyment. [Note: if you're like one member of the ICANN Board of Directors and don't know how to access WSJ articles without a subscription, just click the WSJ  story link on this Google search results page.]

• Draft ICANN FY17 Operating Plan & Budget and Five-Year Operating Plan Update: Open for Public Comments--Close Date 30 Apr 2016 23:59 UTC.

•  ICANN FY16 Q3 (Quarter ending 31 March 2016) Stakeholder Call - 27 April 1500 UTC:  Pre-register online here to join the Quarterly Stakeholder Call online. The call will take place 27 April at 1500 UTC time converter. Joining instructions will be sent to those who register in advance of the call. A recording will be made available after the call here: https://www.icann.org/resources/pages/quarterly-reports-2014-11-13-en.

• New gTLD? Use It OR Lose ItNew gTLD Program Delegation Deadlines - ICANN: "... To date, registry agreements are in place for more than 1,230 new generic top-level domains (gTLDs), and more than 950 of these new gTLDs have been delegated into the root zone ...  The New gTLD Registry Agreement defines a 12-month period after contract execution during which the registry operator must delegate its TLD. ICANN expects registry operators to honor this commitment, and most do. However, we've recently seen an uptick in registry operators who either haven't met their deadline or aren't on track to do so. There are about 200 TLDs with approaching delegation deadlines between now and the end of August 2016 ... If a registry operator does not meet its delegation deadline, ICANN has the option to terminate the registry agreement, as per Section 4.3(b) of the agreement ..."

DotConnectAfrica Trust vs ICANN and ZACR: ICANN's motion to dismiss scheduled for hearing April 25, in Los Angeles.

Earnings Season schedule this week on Domain Mondo's Earnings Calendar:
  • Twitter TWTR April 26
  • Apple AAPL April 26
  • Facebook FB April 27
  • Verisign VRSN April 28, 4:30 p.m. ET
  • Neustar NSR April 28
  • Amazon AMZN April 28 5pm ET

• This past week's five most popular posts on Domain Mondo (# of pageviews Sun-Sat):
Honorable mention: Jack Bogle, Founder of Vanguard Group, Creator of Index Funds, Interview | DomainMondo.com

New This Week: Other Reading Recommendations (with a little taste of the article or a little of my own commentary):

Have a great week!

-- John Poole, Editor, Domain Mondo




DISCLAIMER

2015-12-02

ICANN Webinars Dec 2, CCWG-Accountability Draft Proposal (slides)

Third UPDATE December 20, 2015: see on Domain MondoICANN CCWG Accountability Proposal: CWG Legal Counsel Approval

Second UPDATE: CCWG-Accountability co-Chairs to Hold Additional Briefing Webinar on Draft Proposal of Work Stream 1 Recommendations on December 16 from 20:00-21:30 UTC (time zone converter here). Webinars will be conducted in English. Live interpretation services are available in Arabic, Chinese, French, Spanish, Portuguese and Russian. For Webinar details and how to attend go here.

UPDATE: Replay Webinars and transcripts available on CCWG Wiki. Other links:


Above: December 2 Webinar Slides

In order to brief the community on the contents of their Draft proposal, the Cross Community Working Group on Enhancing ICANN Accountability (CCWG-Accountability) will host two identical briefing webinars on Wednesday, 2 December at different times to facilitate participation across time zones. The webinars will take place on:
  • 2 December from 11:00 – 12:30 UTC (time zone converter here) - 6AM EST (US)
  • 2 December from 20:00 – 21:30 UTC (time zone converter here) - 3PM EST (US)
The webinars will be run online via Adobe Connect room (Strategic Initiatives Webinar).

If you are interested in attending the webinar but would like to receive phone dial-in details, please send an email to acct-staff@icann.org and indicate your language request (if needed). The webinars will be recorded and transcribed. Live interpretation will be made available in English, Spanish, French, Chinese, Arabic, Russian and Portuguese. More info here.

CCWG-Accountability - Draft Proposal on Work Stream 1 Recommendations now open for comments.  Comments close 21 Dec 2015 23:59 UTC. More information below and here.

Recommendations:
  1. Establishing an Empowered Community for Enforcing Community Powers
  2. Empowering the community through consensus: engage, escalate, enforce
  3. Redefining ICANN's Bylaws as 'Standard Bylaws' and 'Fundamental Bylaws'
  4. Ensuring community involvement in ICANN decision-making: seven new Community Powers
  5. Changing aspects of ICANN's Mission, Commitments and Core Values
  6. Reaffirming ICANN's Commitment to respect internationally recognized Human Rights as it carries out its mission
  7. Strengthening ICANN's Independent Review Process
  8. Fortifying ICANN's Request for Reconsideration Process
  9. Incorporation of the Affirmation of Commitments
  10. Enhancing the accountability of Supporting Organizations and Advisory Committees
  11. Board obligations with regards to Governmental Advisory Committee Advice (Stress Test 18)
  12. Committing to further accountability work in Work Stream 2
Current Status: The CCWG-Accountability seeks community feedback on its Draft Proposal. You are invited to indicate your support for recommendations (see above) using the survey the CCWG-Accountability put together to facilitate submission of your comments--survey form located here. The questions align with each recommendation contained in the Draft Proposal on Work Stream 1 Recommendations. Each proposal contains one question designed to determine whether the broad community supports the recommended enhancements as well as a comment box to capture feedback for each proposed change. In addition, a box for any additional input, including on broader topics e.g. Stress Tests, compliance with NTIA criteria and CWG-Stewardship requirements is included in the survey.

Next Steps: Each of the Chartering Organizations shall, in accordance with their own rules and procedures, review and discuss the Draft Proposal(s) and decide whether to adopt the recommendations contained in it. The Chairs of the Chartering Organizations shall notify the Co-Chairs of the WG of the result of the deliberations as soon as feasible.

After synthesis of the comments received, and assuming no major changes, the group currently projects submission of Work Stream 1 Recommendations to the ICANN Board in late January 2016. 


Source of the above: ICANN CCWG-Accountability, icann.org.

Addendum:
Charter - Enhancing ICANN Accountability - 6 Chartering Organizations and their members on CCWG-Accountability:

ALAC
Sebastien Bachollet (Europe)
Tijani Ben Jemaa (Africa)
Alan Greenberg (North America)
Cheryl Langdon-Orr (Asia/Asia Pacific)
León Sanchez (Latin America) – Co-Chair

ASO
Fiona Asonga
Athina Fragkouli
Izumi Okutani
Jorge Villa

ccNSO
Jordan Carter (.NZ, AP Region)
Eberhard Lisse (.NA, African Region)
Roelof Meijer (.NL, European Region)
Giovanni Seppia (.EU, European Region)
Mathieu Weill (.FR, European Region) – Co-Chair

GAC
Par Brumark (Niue)
Olga Cavalli (Agentina)
Alice Munyua (African Union Commission)
Suzanne Radell (USA)
Julia Wolman (Denmark)

GNSO
James Bladel (RrSG, North America Region)
Becky Burr (RySG, North America Region)
Steve DelBianco (CSG, North America Region)
Robin Gross (NCSG, North America Region)
Thomas Rickert (GNSO Council, Europe Region) – Co-Chair

SSAC
Lyman Chapin
Julie Hammer

See also on Domain Mondo: IANA, ICANN Accountability, CCWG Crunch Time! Midnight Deadlines!

[Disclosure: John Poole, Editor of Domain Mondo, has already submitted his comment (via the survey form), supporting all 12 recommendations. His comment may be reviewed here (pdf).]



DISCLAIMER

2015-09-22

Only 19 of 90 Comments Support ICANN Accountability Proposal Overall

Contrary to recent representations and "spin"(pdf) from the ICANN CCWG-Accountability co-Chairs, the second public comment period resulted in less than a majority, and much less than a consensus of community support and endorsement overall, for the most recent CCWG proposal, with most comments raising questions and concerns--see excerpts below from the full pdf slide presentation which can be found as an attachment on the CCWG mail list here: http://mm.icann.org/pipermail/accountability-cross-community/2015-September/005493.html--


All comments may be read here: http://forum.icann.org/lists/comments-ccwg-accountability-03aug15/. The CCWG-Accountability group is scheduled to meet with the ICANN Board of Directors this coming Friday and Saturday, September 25-26, in Los Angeles.

The CCWG-Accountability process dealing with enhancing ICANN accountability is one part of the NTIA requirements for the IANA Stewardship Transition, the other part being the ICG process now also underway.

See also on Domain Mondo:




DISCLAIMER

2015-08-31

CCWG-Accountability August 31 Meetings With Advisors and ICANN Board

Meetings - Enhancing ICANN Accountability:
  1. CCWG-Accountability Meeting with the Advisors: Monday, 31 August 2015 from 13:00-14:00 UTC /  9:00-10:00 AM ET (US) - Time zone converter here
  2. CCWG Briefing to the ICANN Board: Monday, 31 August 2015 from 22:00-23:30 UTC /  6:00-7:30 PM ET (US)  - Time zone converter here
The Adobe Connect Room is open to any and all silent observers for both meetings above: icann.adobeconnect.com/accountability/

The CCWG-Accountability (Cross-Community Working Group on Enhancing ICANN Accountability) has published its 2nd draft for 40-day public comment--see Cross Community Working Group on Enhancing ICANN Accountability 2nd Draft Report (Work Stream 1) - ICANN.

Community feedback is requested on this 2nd draft proposal of proposed enhancements to ICANN's accountability framework that the CCWG-Accountability has identified as essential to happen or be committed to before the IANA Stewardship Transition takes place (Work Stream 1). Comments are due by the deadline of 12 September 2015 at 23:59 UTC.

Next up: CCWG/Board Dialogue CallWednesday, 2 September 2015 from 22:00 – 01:00 AM/UTC (Thurs, 3 Sept) Time zone converter here 
"... consistent with the CCWG request, the Board will have an open teleconference with the CCWG to help inform the Board's development of its comments to be submitted into the Public Comment forum before the close of the comment period on 12 September. Call details will be announced so that anyone in the community may participate..."


2015-08-04

ICANN Accountability, IANA Transition, Proposals, Comments, Webinars

UPDATE August 31, 2015: Volume 9: An Update on IANA Stewardship Discussions - ICANNAn Update on IANA Stewardship Discussions, Date: August 31, 2015 (read the full update at the link above)

UPDATE: Important dates in the IANA Transition and ICANN Accountability processes:

Public Comment Period on ICG's IANA Stewardship Transition Proposal closes 8 Sep 2015 

Public Comment Period for CCWG-Accountability's 2nd draft of ICANN accountability enhancements (Work Stream 1) closes 12 Sep 2015

18-19 Sep 2015 : ICG Face-to-Face Meeting, Los Angeles

30 Sep-15 Oct 2015: CCWG-Accountability's 2nd and final proposal (Work Stream 1) presented to ALAC, ASO,ccNSO, GAC and GNSO for their approval.

18-22 Oct 2015: ICANN 54 inc. ICG Face-to-Face meeting and presentation of proposals for IANAstewardship and ICANN accountability enhancements (Work Stream 1) to the ICANNBoard for subsequent transmission to the NTIA.

Week 1, Nov 2015: ICANN Board transmits IANA stewardship transition and ICANN accountability (Work Stream 1) proposals to NTIA.

Announcements from ICG (IANA Stewardship Transition Coordination Group) and ICANN:

1. IANA Stewardship Transition
The ICG is asking the public to review the Proposal to Transition the Stewardship of the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) Functions from the U.S. Commerce Department’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) to the Global Multistakeholder Community. Comments are due by the deadline of 8 September 2015 at 23:59 UTC.
  1. Thursday 6 August 2015 from 19:00-20:30 UTC time converter 
  2. Friday 7 August 2015 from 11:00-12:30 UTC time converter 
2. ICANN Accountability
The CCWG-Accountability (Cross-Community Working Group on Enhancing ICANN Accountability) has published its 2nd draft for 40-day public comment--see Cross Community Working Group on Enhancing ICANN Accountability 2nd Draft Report (Work Stream 1) - ICANN. Community feedback is requested on this 2nd draft proposal of proposed enhancements to ICANN's accountability framework that the CCWG-Accountability has identified as essential to happen or be committed to before the IANA Stewardship Transition takes place (Work Stream 1). Comments are due by the deadline of 12 September 2015 at 23:59 UTC.

Community feedback (see ICANN Accountability 2nd Draft Comments) will help the CCWG-Accountability to improve its proposal and carry on with next steps, including Chartering Organizations' endorsement of the CCWG-Accountability output before it is submitted to the ICANN Board during or after ICANN 54 in Dublin in October 2015.

In order to brief the community on the contents of their 2nd draft proposal, the CCWG-Accountability Chairs will host two identical briefing webinars via Adobe Connect and dial-in (webinar details): 
  1. Tuesday 4 August from 19:00 – 21:00 UTC time converter
  2. Friday 7 August from 07:00 – 09:00 UTC time converter

2015-07-07

ICANN Staff Report OVERDUE on Proposed Renewal of .TRAVEL Registry

UPDATE: Report issued "As a next step, ICANN intends to consider the renewal proposals taking into account the comments."

screenshot showing ICANN Staff "Report Overdue" - .TRAVEL Registry Renewal
ICANN Staff "Report Overdue" - .TRAVEL Registry Renewal - source: ICANN website

ICANN "Staff Report Due 5 Jul 2015 23:59 UTC"
Report Overdue

source: Proposed Renewal of .TRAVEL Sponsored TLD Registry Agreement - ICANN

In the meantime, the same URS issue is also present in .CAT and .PRO (links below)--Comments close July 7, 2015 23:59 UTC (time converton both .CAT and .PRO --

See also on Domain Mondo

2015-06-22

Most Comments OPPOSE ICANN Extending URS Policy to dotTRAVEL

Comments received by ICANN overwhelmingly OPPOSE extending URS Policy to .TRAVEL and other legacy gTLDs (generic top-level domains). Comment period closed June 21, 2015 23:59 UTC.

Only two comments FOR extending the URS Policy to .TRAVEL were received--one from new gTLD Registry Operator DONUTS and the other from IPC (Intellectual Property Constituency).

Among the many comments OPPOSING were those received from the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), the ICANN Business Constituency, the ICANN Non-Commercial Stakeholders Group (NCSG), the Internet Commerce Association (ICA), and IP Justice, which stated:
"IP Justice opposes this illegitimate attempt by ICANN staff to further circumvent proper policy development processes in the creation and imposition of new gTLD policy. In addition to the inappropriate process utilized, the policy itself will chill freedom of expression as domain names will be quickly suspended without any fair opportunity for consumers to defend their lawful rights to use their domain names. Particularly at this critical time when the world is watching ICANN to see if it has begun to fix its accountability crisis, this illegitimate imposition of a dangerous policy on the world is extremely disturbing." 
Domain Mondo thanks all those who submitted comments opposing the proposed extension of URS policy to .TRAVEL. Thanks also to Philip Corwin and the Internet Commerce Association for taking the lead and "sounding the alarm" on this attempt by ICANN staff to apply new gTLD URS policy against legacy gTLD domain name registrants. Below are the links to all comments that were received--FOR and OPPOSE--

2015 Jun 22
OPPOSE: Re: Proposed Renewal of .TRAVEL Sponsored TLD Registry Agreement Phil Temperly

2015 Jun 21
OPPOSE: NCSG Comments Edward Morris
OPPOSE: Policy Needs to Developed Through Legitimate Process. Staff Created and Imposed Policies Like This Are Illegitimate. URS Will Chill Freedom of Expression Robin Gross
OPPOSE: Creation of De Facto Consensus Policy via Contract Renewal Process is a Bylaws Violation Phil Corwin
OPPOSE: Business Constituency (BC) comment on Proposed .TRAVEL Registry Agreement. Steve DelBianco

FORDonuts comment - Proposed Renewal of .TRAVEL Sponsored TLD Registry Agreement Mason Cole

2015 Jun 17
OPPOSEProposed Renewal of .TRAVEL Sponsored TLD Registry Agreement Jay Chapman

FORIPC Comments on Proposed Renewal of .TRAVEL Registry Agreement Greg Shatan

2015 Jun 12
OPPOSE: EFF comments on .travel renewal Jeremy Malcolm (Electronic Frontier Foundation)
OPPOSE: Proposed Renewal of .TRAVEL Sponsored TLD Registry Agreement Rook Media

2015 May 25
OPPOSE: Proposed Renewal of .TRAVEL Sponsored TLD Registry Agreement John Poole (Editor of Domain Mondo)

2015 May 22
OPPOSE: Opposition domains@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
OPPOSE: Opposed to inclusion of URS in .TRAVEL registry agreement George Kirikos
OPPOSE: Proposed Renewal of .TRAVEL Sponsored TLD Registry Agreement Tim Hall

2015 May 21
OPPOSE: URS issues and concerns eCorp

Source: ICANN Email Archives: [comments-travel-renewal-12may15]
See also for more information: https://www.icann.org/public-comments/travel-renewal-2015-05-12-en.




2015-01-28

NTIA's Larry Strickling Questions IANA CWG-Stewardship Draft Proposal

Ass't Secretary Larry Strickling of the US Department of Commerce, NTIA, which oversees ICANN and is involved in the IANA transition, spoke at the State of the Net Conference, January 27th--his full remarks are reprinted on expvc.com--excerpt below:

"Today, I would like to answer some of the questions that have arisen in recent weeks about NTIA’s role in the transition and then, to pose some questions of our own for stakeholders to consider as they continue their work to develop the plan.  We do so in good faith and in appreciation of the hard work of the volunteer community engaged in these discussions... We will provide informal feedback where appropriate.  We are as aware as anyone that we should not do anything that interferes with an open and participatory multistakeholder process.  We support a process where all ideas are welcome and where participants are able to test fully all transition options.  Nonetheless, the community should proceed as if it has only one chance to get this right. *Everyone has the responsibility to participate as they deem appropriate.  If, by asking questions, we can ensure that the community develops a well-thought-out plan that answers all reasonable concerns, we will do so...  We have taken a look at the December 1 proposal and the ensuing comments and discussion it has engendered.  As the CWG on the naming-related functions continues its work to finalize its draft proposal, NTIA would like to offer the following questions for the stakeholders to consider:
  • The draft proposes the creation of three or four new entities to be involved in the naming related processes.  Could the creation of any new entity interfere with the security and stability of the DNS during and after the transition?  Given that the community will need to develop, implement and test new structures and processes prior to a final transition, can it get all this done in a timeframe consistent with the expectations of all stakeholders?
  • Does the proposal ensure a predictable and reliable process for customers of root zone management services?  Under the current system, registry operators can be confident of the timing of review and implementation of routine root zone updates.  If a new committee takes up what is currently a routine procedural check, how will the community protect against processing delays and the potential for politicization of the system?
  • In response to the December 1 draft, other suggestions have emerged.  Are all the options and proposals being adequately considered in a manner that is fair and transparent? 
  • How does the proposal avoid re-creating existing concerns in a new form or creating new concerns?  If the concern is the accountability of the existing system, does creating new committees and structures simply create a new set of accountability questions? 
All of these questions require resolution prior to approval of any transition plan..."

*Note: Editor of Domain Mondo, John Poole, is a "participant" in the IANA transition CWG-stewardship process.

2014-12-23

IANA Stewardship Transition, CWG Draft Proposal Comments

Comments on the Cross Community Working Group (CWG) On Naming Related Functions Public Consultation on Draft Transition Proposal (concerning the IANA Stewardship Transition) were closed as of 23:59 UTC, 22 Dec 2014. All comments can be found and read on the forum: http://forum.icann.org/lists/comments-cwg-naming-transition-01dec14/ including that of Domain Mondo's Editor, John Poole.

The key dates of the CWG work plan:
  • 1 December 2014: Publication date of the Draft Proposal for Public Comment
  • 19 January 2015: Submission of the CWG Final Proposal to chartering organizations
  • 31 January 2015: Planned submission of the Final CWG Proposal to ICG
The draft proposal and further information may be found at these links:

Cross Community Working Group (CWG) on Naming Related Functions Draft Transition Proposal

https://www.icann.org/news/announcement-2-2014-12-01-en

Draft Proposal: https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/cwg-naming-transition-01dec14-en.pdf [PDF, 1.72 MB]

Domain Mondo archive