Showing posts with label Peru. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Peru. Show all posts

2017-07-21

New gTLD .AMAZON IRP Final Declaration, What Happens Next?

ICANN Loses Another New gTLD IRPAmazon EU S.à.r.l. v. ICANN (.AMAZON) | ICANN.org:
New gTLD .AMAZON IRP Final Declaration
New gTLD .AMAZON IRP Final Declaration (pdf)
Independent Review Process Final Declaration (IRP) (pdf, 293KB) 11 July 2017, excerpt (pp. 2-3):
The [ICANN] Board, acting through the NGPC [ICANN’s New gTLD Program Committee], acted in a manner inconsistent with its Articles, Bylaws and Applicant Guidebook because, as more fully explained below, by giving complete deference to the consensus advice of the Government Advisory Committee (“GAC”) regarding whether there was a well-founded public policy reason for its advice, the NGPC failed in its duty to independently evaluate and determine whether valid and merits based public policy interests existed supporting the GAC’s consensus advice. In sum, we conclude that the NGPC failed to exercise the requisite degree of independent judgment in making its decision as required by Article IV, Section 3.4(iii) of its Bylaws. (See also ICANN, Supplementary Procedures, Rule 8(iii) [hereafter “Supplementary Procedures”] ... While the GAC was not required to give a reason or rationale for its consensus advice, the Board, through the NPGC, was. In this regard, the Board, acting through the NGPC, failed in its duty to explain and give adequate reasons for its decision, beyond merely citing to its reliance on the GAC advice and the presumption, albeit a strong presumption, that it was based on valid and legitimate public policy concerns. An explanation of the NGPC’s reasons for denying the applications was particularly important in this matter, given the absence of any rationale or reasons provided by the GAC for its advice and the fact that the record before the NGPC failed to substantially support the existence of a well-founded and merits-based public policy reason for denying Amazon’s applications ..." (emphasis added)
Costs, fees, expenses and attorney fees (p. 53):
"ICANN shall reimburse Amazon the sum of US$163,045.51, representing that portion of said fees and expenses in excess of the apportioned costs previously incurred by Amazon ... Each side will bear its own expenses and attorneys’ fees."
 So what happens next? 
"The practical effect of the Panel's ruling is that the dispute is remanded for further proceedings. In other words, Brazil, Peru, the GAC and ICANN, as well as Amazon, may now supplement and strengthen their positions. The Applicant Guidebook states that the objective for ICANN is to "determine whether approval would be in the best interest of the internet community." §5.1. Here, all the interested parties, including Brazil, Peru and the GAC, are members of that community. See Bylaws, Art. I, § 2(11). They all share a common objective and potentially a common benefit in promoting their respective interests anew in light of this Declaration."--Hon. A. Howard Matz, IRP supra, p.67 (emphasis added)

Domain Mondo's analysis and opinion:

Upon "remand" and in accordance with the "objective for ICANN" referenced by Judge Matz above, Brazil, Peru, and the GAC, may very well prevail. As I have noted before, ICANN's dot BRAND new gTLDs were a BAD idea and completely contrary to the historic principles of the internet, see RFC 1591 and News Review: ICANN's Extortionate .BRAND Scam Failing.

Trademarks as generic top-level domains, and presumptive rights of renewal (of gTLD registry agreements), are two of the worst corruptions of the global internet DNS foisted by inept ICANN and its corrupt GNSO upon the global internet community. All TLDs are global public resources, NOT property, in accordance with RFC 1591 and the U.S. government's argument in the recent Weinstein case (pdf). But greed, conflicts of interest, cronyism, and incompetence govern ICANN policy-making and implementation.
"[W]hen a decision is taken about a possible new top-level domain, ICANN's job is to work out, in a transparent and accountable manner, whether it is really in the best interest of the world as a whole, not just of those launching the new domain."--Sir Tim Berners-Lee at the Net Mundial Conference, April, 2014, in São Paulo, Brazil.

-- John Poole, Editor, Domain Mondo 

feedback & comments via twitter @DomainMondo


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2016-02-19

GAC Members Minority Statement on ICANN Accountability WS1 Proposal

UPDATE February 26, 2016: Updated Minority Statements--Following the publication of the CCWG-Accountability Final Report and its distribution to the Chartering Organizations, those five members of CCWG who had submitted minority statements [available separately here] were given the opportunity to submit revise minority statements. All minority statements are now in Appendix A  (pdf)--embedded below–"Documenting Process of Building Consensus" of the Final Report, including that of GAC member Olga Cavalli, whose minority statement is now supported by 16 governments:
Argentina, Benin, Brazil, Chile, Commonwealth of Dominica, France, Guinea, Mali, Nigeria, Paraguay, Peru, Portugal, Russian Federation, The Democratic Republic of Congo, Uruguay, Venezuela:



--end of update--
"Does this [the GAC members' minority statement below] constitute an objectionMy understanding is that only objections can be accompanied by a minority opinion. As the GAC works by consensus, I assume it means the GAC objects. Given Ms Gross Minority statement, it follows she objects. I have objected formally as well and have sent a Minority StatementCan the Co-Chairs please declare non-consensus so we can all get on with our lives? Not only would it be cost saving..." --Dr Eberhard W Lisse, Thu Feb 18 19:35:55 UTC 2016, CCWG member (emphasis and link added)
A few CCWG-Accountability members have filed minority statements in dissent to the CCWG-Accountability Work Stream 1 final proposal now scheduled for final approval at ICANN55 in Marrakech, March 5-10, including a CCWG member appointed by GAC, who filed a minority statement on behalf of nine governments:

[CCWG-ACCT] Updated Minority Statement for the CCWG-Accountability Supplemental Final Proposal on Work Stream 1 Recommendations Thu Feb 18 16:39:44 UTC 2016:

"As a member of the CCWG on Accountability appointed by the GAC [Governmental Advisory Committee], and on behalf of the governments of:
Argentina
Brazil
Chile
France
Paraguay
Peru
Portugal
Uruguay
Venezuela

"I am submitting an updated verision of the Minority Statement which I sent yesterday..."
 [revised text of minority statement in embed below and here (pdf)]

Best regards
Olga Cavalli
Argentina GAC Representative
GAC Vicechair



Others also filing minority statements:

UPDATE: Minority statement also filed by ALAC Member Tijani Ben Jemaa: a) "I would like to express my strong opposition to removing the entire board by a decision taken by only 3 SO/ACs under any circumstance ..." (pdf) and b)  "I would like to make this minority statement regarding
Recommendation 6 (Human Rights) - I express my opposition to replacing “within its mission” in the beginning of the proposed text by “within its core value”..." (pdf)

[CCWG-ACCT] Minority Statement of Individual Member Robin Gross (pdf): ".... "The CCWG-Accountability proposal includes a number of important and long over-due accountability reforms including improvements to ICANN’s Independent Review Process (IRP), Reconsideration Request process, board removal rights, and a noteworthy bylaws commitment to respect human rights in ICANN’s operation, among other truly laudable accountability reform measures. However, the long-term harm to a free and open Internet from the proposal’s shifting the traditional balance of power over ICANN in favor of governments and away from the Supporting Organizations and the private sector is a monumental mistake."

[CCWG-ACCT] Appendix H - ASO Minority Statement: "... ASO, we would like to make a minority statement below, not on the recommendations but on "Appendix H: Bylaws Drafting Process & Implementation Timeline". Our statement is related to bylaws drafting process & implementation timeline, and not directly related to contents of the recommendations ..."

*Note: only appointed members (not participants) were permitted to file minority statements. All filed minority statements are in Appendix A (pdf) to the final proposal.

The members of the 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

Others
Bruce Tonkin (ICANN Board Liaison)
Samantha Eisner (ICANN Staff Representative)

For more information on CCWG-Accountability WS1 final proposal, see Domain Mondo: IANA Stewardship Transition, New ICANN CCWG Accountability Timeline.




DISCLAIMER

2015-10-10

IMF World Bank Meetings, Christine Lagarde Press Briefing (videos)


Video above: IMF World Bank Meetings, Lima, Peru, October 9-11, 2015: What Results Can We Expect? Bloomberg's Francine Lacqua reports on the world’s finance chiefs and central bankers gathering in Lima to discuss a sluggish global economy. She reports on "Bloomberg ‹GO›, October 8, 2015.


Press Briefing: IMF Managing Director, Christine Lagarde - (53:12) October 8, 2015
Topics discussed include: TPP Trade Agreement, China, World Economy,
2015 Annual Meetings - World Bank Group - International Monetary Fund
Speakers:
Christine Lagarde, Managing Director, IMF
David Lipton, First Deputy Managing Director, IMF
Gerry Rice, Director, Communications Department

2015 Annual IMF World Bank Meetings website

International Monetary Fund: imf.org
World Bank: worldbank.org


Managing the Transition to a Healthier Global Economy
(01:01:05)  September 30, 2015
IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde discussed the state of the global economy in a speech delivered at an event hosted by Council of the Americas (AS/COA). Video: Courtesy of Council of the Americas.

See also on Domain Mondo:



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