Showing posts with label lobbying. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lobbying. Show all posts

2017-07-22

Tech Review: US Tech Stocks Soar, Hitting New Highs (video)

Tech Review (TR 2017-07-22)--Domain Mondo's weekly review of tech news:
Features • 1) US Tech Stocks Soar, Hitting New Highs, 2) How Trump Is Kicking Silicon Valley's Butt, 3) China Takes Advantage of U.S. Limits on Drone Sales, 4) Amazon $AMZN DC Lobbying, FTC Probe, Messaging App, 5) Oculus Rift Dead in the Water, 6) FANG and Q2 2017 Earnings this week, 7) ICYMI Tech News.

Update July 25, 2017:
 Stock Chart: US Tech Stocks Soar. Hitting New Highs

1) US Tech Stocks Soar, Hitting New Highs

Video above published Jul 20, 2017, by FT.com: The crash of tech stocks after dotcom mania and the long, subsequent crawl back by the sector has been accompanied by radical change.

2) How Trump Is Kicking Silicon Valley's Butt

Video above published Jul 20, 2017, by Bloomberg.com:  Bloomberg’s Max Chafkin discusses how Silicon Valley’s resistance to the Trump administration has faded. He speaks with Emily Chang on “Bloomberg Technology.”

3)  China Takes Advantage of U.S. Limits on Drone Sales

Video above published Jul 18, 2017, by WSJ.com: As the U.S. tries to curb the selling of military drones overseas, China is filling the void, expanding sales of the advanced weaponry in the Middle East and Africa.

4)  Amazon $AMZN: Amazon spent $3.2 million in second quarter on Washington lobbying effort | Reuters.com and FTC probing allegations of Amazon's deceptive discounting | Reuters.com  and Amazon Makes A Move On Facebook | SeekingAlpha.com"It is also looking to build a messaging app which will directly challenge the dominance of Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp."

5)  Oculus Rift Is Dead in the Water | MIT TechnologyReview.com--Facebook acquired Oculus for $2 billion in 2014.

6) FANG--Facebook (FB), Amazon (AMZN), Netflix (NFLX), Google (Alphabet: GOOG, GOOGL)--Ranked By Strength Of Competitive Advantage"If we take price into account, there is only one FANG I'd want"--$GOOG, $GOOGL--SeekingAlpha.com

Q2 2017 earnings this coming week:
  • Alphabet GOOG / GOOGL July 24 5pm EDT
  • Facebook FB July 26 5pm EDT
  • Twitter TWTR July 27 7am EDT
  • Verisign VRSN July 27 4:30pm EDT 
  • Amazon AMZN July 27 5:30pm EDT

7) ICYMI Tech News:

-- John Poole, Editor, Domain Mondo  

feedback & comments via twitter @DomainMondo


DISCLAIMER

2016-06-12

News Review: IANA Transition Has Already Cost ICANN Over $28 Million

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

 While the BIG news this week may have been the 'baked-in-the-cake' report from NTIA, and Capitol Hill's reaction, you may have missed two revealing comments made by a former ICANN staff member and a former ICANN Chairman:
"The endemic problems at ICANN, which are most strongly reflected in its staff and board's intransigence, have also started spreading to the broader ICANN community – a community that is increasingly reliant on the organization's financial support. Over the course of the IANA transition plan's development, that community settled for untested convoluted decision-making processes over solid reform."--Kieren McCarthy, former ICANN staff member, writing in TheRegister.co.uk (emphasis added)
 "If I have any trepidation about the proposal it is associated with its general complexity. As the former chairman of ICANN, I am no stranger to the evolution of ICANN's structure and processes and their relative intricacy. The new proposal adds its own unique aspects to this tendency and it remains to be seen how well the system will work."--Vint Cerf, Vice President and Chief Internet Evangelist at Google, and former ICANN Board Chairman (2000-2007), ACM.org (emphasis added)
ICANN released (pdf) this week to the Cross-Community Working Groups, the IANA Stewardship Transition costs incurred at ICANN (including CCWG-Accountability and CWG-Stewardship) from inception on 1 July 2014 to 31 March 2016. Amounts in chart below are in USD thousands (000's):

Chart of IANA transition costs July 2014 - March 2016
IANA transition costs July 2014 - March 2016
Totals are shown on the last line in the chart above
Staff: $3,834,000
Travel & Meetings: $2,129,000
Telecom & Language Services: $2,983,000
Legal Services $10,793,000
Lobbying the U.S. Government: $1,096,000
Other Professional Services: $2,478,000
Total: $23,312,000 

As expected, law firms took almost half of all the spending. While ICANN is required by U.S. law to disclose what it spends lobbying the U.S. government, it is not required to disclose (and doesn't) what it spends "lobbying" foreign governments, and other "influential" persons and entities. Note however, ICANN has spent heavily in support of 'initiatives' outside its scope and mission, not included in the above amounts.

In addition, from 1 April to 30 June 2016, an additional $5,000,000 (ICANN estimate) has, or will be incurred, bringing the total to more than $28 million ($US) through the end of June.

With CCWG-Accountability Work Stream 2 just now getting underway, and not expected to finish until a year from now, final costs will not be known until sometime next year. If it turns out that the untested, unproven proposals to make ICANN accountable fail, and the world gives up on ICANN, it will have all been in vain.

Also worth noting: as a follow-up to the foreign "lobbying" reference above, ICANN, its directors, officers, and employees, are all subject to the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) (15 U.S.C. § 78dd-1, et seq.), penalties of which include prison terms of up to 5 years. Since ICANN refuses to disclose foreign lobbying expenses and other influence-peddling expenses outside the U.S., anyone (inside or outside of ICANN), with knowledge of possible violations (past, present, or future) of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, should contact the U.S. Department of Justice directly: Report a FCPA Violation via email to FCPA.Fraud@usdoj.gov or via fax 202-514-7021.

Likewise, the corruption can also go "the other way," as noted in the NTIA report (p. 170 of 172):
"“Capture” Through Corruption. Recent events have shown that international organizations ... can be “captured” through corruption. Leading officials of such organizations have pleaded guilty to (or have been indicted for) accepting bribes ... Correspondingly, it is at least imaginable that a government or a private actor could bribe the board of ICANN to vote the way it wishes on some hypothetical critical decision." 
Or even bribe an ICANN employee for 'insider information' or for 'favorable treatment' on a pending issue. We already know about the revolving door at ICANN and how it corrupts ICANN decision-making. We also already know of at least one high-ranking ICANN officer, who after resigning due to an undisclosed "conflict of interest," went on to serve as Executive Director of the leading new gTLDs domain name industry association, of which former ICANN President and CEO Fadi Chehade admitted"... this idea of the DNA Association started in some small meetings we were having at the ICANN office where I was a huge early supporter ..."  Wouldn't you like to know of all the 'small meetings' at ICANN offices where things are discussed and decided in secret? Among the many things missed by the ICANN Cross-Community Working Groups involved with the IANA transition and ICANN accountability, is the failure of the ICANN Board and ICANN management to have, and enforce, a corporate-wide conflicts of interest and code of ethics or code of conduct policy, applicable to every ICANN employee, not just Board members, officers and a few "key employees."

Question of the Week:
As noted by @MiltonMueller there is a glaring delay on the IANA transition tentative timeline:
Chart of IANA Stewardship Transition - tentative timeline - updates
The above chart was derived from Congressional testimony on March 17, and the last we heard from ICANN was May 10th: "Root Zone Maintainer Agreement (RZMA) Status update: Discussions between ICANN and Verisign to finalize details of the RZMA are continuing. The two parties have coalesced around many key elements of the agreement and hope to have a final draft by the end of the month. Once the draft RZMA is finalized it will be made publicly available on icann.org."  

The "end of the month" has "come and gone" and now more than a month has passed since the last update, and nothing but silence from ICANN to the global multistakeholder community. Verisign was requesting a 10 year extension of its dot COM registry agreement to run coincident with its new 10-year Root Zone Maintainer Agreement. On April 28, 2016, Verisign's Chairman reported "ICANN and VeriSign are in the final stages of preparing the Root Zone Maintainer Agreement and the .COM Registry Agreement extension documents. We continue to make progress and we'll provide periodic updates as appropriate on our progress towards these objectives."  If there has been a breakdown in negotiations, no one is talking.

Last week it was noted how ICANN and its "partners" a/k/a new gTLD registry operators exploit domain name registrants (see George Kirikos comments), but that's just the tip of the iceberg, here's another way ICANN and its "partners" exploit domain name registrants:
"... we are starting to see more frequent changes to registry pricing and premium name policies, which could possibly affect renewal pricing in the future. One particular situation that created a bit of commotion in the RrSG [Registrar Stakeholder Group] this year was the prospective RRA [Registry-Registrar Agreement] changes brought forth by Vox Populi, the Registry Operator behind .SUCKS. The two problematic changes suggested were to allow the registry the right to amend any and all terms of the RRA with only a 15 day notice to registrars and added language that possibly would haveprevented registrars from voicing their opinion about the .SUCKS extension to potential registrants. The RrSG responded to these alterations by officially objecting to ICANN; an action that eventually resulted in the registry modifying the changes to incorporate more favorable language for registrars. Undoubtedly, we will continue to see many more Registry Operators come forth with changes to policies and agreements over the rest of this year ..."--Mark Monitor New gTLD Quarterly Report Q2 2016 (emphasis added)
Innovation? That same Mark Monitor report cited above, also discloses "the most frequently registered label [second level] in the [new gTLD] .Brand space is HOME; e.g. HOME.BARCLAYS" but 55% of "home.brand" domain names resolve to a .COM domain name, while 18% are an "inactive page," and only 23% resolve to home.brand content page.

Inescapable conclusion: .BRAND new gTLDs are mostly defensive for trademark and branding purposes, but ICANN (at $185,000 + $25,000 annually for each .BRAND new gTLD) is making out like a bandit (while also giving a boost to the registry services industry, the back end operators of each top-level domain or TLD.) It's the kind of shakedown Michael Corleone would have loved.

• Finally, the Mark Monitor report notes:
The general trend of redirecting .Brand domains to existing content on legacy gTLDs (.COM) or ccTLDs continues. We’re also seeing more .Brand domains resolving to content by framing, or displaying, content from other sites. While the user experience with framing may be better than a redirect because the .Brand domain remains visible in the address bar, the practice [framing] doesn’t score well with search engines. Search engines view duplicate content as lower quality and therefore the domain won’t rank as well as the domain with the original unframed content.
•  If you're 'selling' dot COM domains to Chinese buyers, read this post by someone who really knows and understands the Chinese market: Finding Chinese companies for your .com name | coreile.com: "... We know .com is king in China and therefore is frequently the target of domain upgrade by Chinese companies ..."

•  ICANN has announced "the implementation of amendments to the [Domain Name] Transfer Policy and the Transfer Dispute Resolution Policy (TDRP). The amended Transfer Policy is applicable to all gTLD names and ICANN-accredited registrars. The amended TDRP is applicable to all gTLD names, ICANN-accredited registrars, and registries. These new requirements will take effect and will be enforced by ICANN beginning on 1 December 2016."

•  What would an ICANN meeting look like if no one was getting their expenses paid by ICANN to be there? Report on Public Comments on Draft FY17 Operating Plan and Budget and Five-Year Operating Plan Update Now Available - ICANN"The budget is scheduled for adoption when the ICANN Board meets during ICANN56 in Helsinki." Read how ICANN responded to a comment requesting "more travel support" (ICANN's junkets and codependent stakeholders' culture is fed by ICANN paying for an increasing number of stakeholders' travel, accommodations, and per diem expenses, to each ICANN meeting):
"Since the ICANN 33 meeting in Cairo, supported travelers per ICANN meeting have increased over 325% and out of pocket travel costs have increased 250% ... during that time the organization has not examined those increases in a structured way. In view of the expansion of travel support for the last several years and expected changes prompted by the potential IANA Stewardship Transition implementation, the organization intends - in partnership with the community - to conduct a thorough examination of community supported travel in FY17 so that more strategic consideration can be given to levels of travel support among all community activities and groups across the organization."
•  No issues open for comments close this coming week at ICANN.

•  Internet Governance Forum (IGF) newsIGF Retreat 2016 Call for Written Inputs"All stakeholders are invited to send written inputs commenting on issues that will be discussed" at the IGF Retreat (July 14-16, 2016). The guiding questions (based on the the draft agenda) may be reviewed, and responded to, here. The deadline for responding is July 1.

•  This week in tech:

•  Five most popular posts (# of pageviews Sun-Sat) this week on DomainMondo.com:
 Other Reading Recommendations:
  1. 'It's Over'--first the internet, now apps--The app boom is over | Recode.net"... If you are an independent app developer or publisher, you have probably known this for a while, because you have found it very difficult to get people to download your app — the average American smartphone user downloads zero apps per month ... Last month, the top 15 app publishers saw downloads drop an average of 20 percent in the U.S., according to research from Nomura, which relies on data from app tracker SensorTower ... Outside the U.S., the top 15 apps grew by [only] 3 percent last month..."
  2. Ex-iPhone Users in China | ChinaInternetWatch.comPenguin Intelligence, part of Tencent, recently conducted a survey on iPhone losing users in China. Over one-third of China smartphone users would replace smartphones for new ones at least once a year and over three-quarters of Chinese would do so every two years according to the survey. Among iPhone users surveyed, almost half gave up using an iPhone and Huawei is their top replacement choice.
  3. Rethinking a business model: New York Times 'Exploring' Ad-Free Digital Subscription | AdAge.com"CEO Mark Thompson, at IAB Conference, Criticizes Eyeo and Adblock Plus"
  4. The Distraction of Investment Noise | Bloomberg.com"Deciding what to focus on -- and how much attention or weight to give to these issues and events -- is a challenge for traders and investors alike."
  5. Free speech isn't free: Dozens in Russia imprisoned for social media likes, reposts | AP.org and ICYMIhttp://safeinternetforum.ru/en/  Russia discussed with China internet management issues, including China’s Internet sovereignty model and content control of the internet during the 7th International Safer Internet Forum, April 27, 2016, in Moscow. An opening address was given by Lu Wei, "Head of General Office of the CPC Central Committee’s Central Leading Group for Internet Security and Informatization." See also The Best and Worst Internet Experience in the World | technologyreview.com"The system today [in China] has largely shifted from censoring individual news stories to shutting out entire services or platforms." and China's government must pre-approve every single mobile game starting July 1 | techinasia.com.
  6. 1984 commercialized? How Alexa, Siri, and Google Assistant Will Make Money Off You | technologyreview.com
  7. If you've got it, flaunt it, don't hide it: Panama Papers Show How Rich United States Clients Hid Millions Abroad | NYTimes.com
  8. Is the Market Rational After All? | charleshughsmith.blogspot.com"This is the market we have now: dominated by delusional, irrational central planners with unlimited powers to create money out of thin air to fund their manipulations. The only rational response is to trade accordingly: anticipate constant manipulation, anticipate constant bombastic propaganda of the "whatever it takes" variety, and anticipate massive selling of volatility to maintain the ever-so-important illusion that global risks have been disappeared by central banks and central planners."
  9. What if the U.S. Dismantled China’s Internet Firewall? | FPIF.org"The U.S. could retaliate against a massive Chinese cyberattack by blowing up its web censorship ..." But read: The Pentagon's Cybersecurity Priorities Have Not Changed in a Decade | Motherboard.vice.com: "At present, Cybercom is a component of Strategic Command, but its top official is the head of the National Security Agency—arguably a needlessly complicated arrangement. The nebulous command structure also means that Cyber Command never really has to own up to its own failings."
  10. Brexit may be just the beginning: “The Specter of a Break-up Is Haunting Europe” | WolfStreet.com"... it’s perhaps no surprise that senior eurocrats are falling into despondency, despair, and internal bickering ..." NoteBrexit vote is June 23.
  11. Politically correct: The Liberal Blind Spot | NYTimes.com"... As I see it, we are hypocritical: We welcome people who don’t look like us, as long as they think like us ... On campuses at this point, illiberalism is led by liberals. The knee-jerk impulse to protest campus speakers from the right has grown so much that even Democrats like Madeleine Albright, the first female secretary of state, have been targeted ..."--Nicholas Kristof
  12. Read We Were Wrong About Gravity… What Do We Have Wrong Today? | LitHub.com. I suggest turning off the noise and distractions of U.S. Presidential politics. I've told @UnderMyPalm to be prepared to wrap it up (the Election2016 page), if, and when, Bernie drops out, leaving only 2 candidates, each with very high unfavorables, vying for the nation's top elected office. And frankly, the mainstream media have become the worst enablers and PR flacks this year. It's all become such a circus, I don't want to watch, and I have better things to do. I hope you do too.
Have a great week!

-- John Poole, Editor, Domain Mondo


feedback & comments via twitter @DomainMondo


DISCLAIMER

2016-02-09

How ICANN and ICANN CEO Fadi Chehadé Evade Accountability

Something is rotten in ICANN and the old saying is the rot starts at the top. Embedded below, and here (pdf), is the Editor of Domain Mondo's interchange with ICANN CEO Fadi Chehadé in October, 2015, at the ICANN54 Public Forum, and follow-up by ICANN staff in January, 2016, in advance of the ICANN Quarterly Stakeholder call. A copy of the interchange below has been sent to Penny Pritzker, U.S. Commerce Secretary, Larry Strickling (NTIA), and a few others. One can only conclude and surmise from all of this:
1) ICANN intentionally nurtures conflicts of interest as its normal way of doing business (question 1 below);
2) In regard to 21st Century Fox's Rick Lane's questions at ICANN54 Public Forum and ICANN's non-responses below, it is possible ICANN has been paying $$ to influence foreign governments and others outside the U.S. [the two links provided by James Cole of ICANN below are not responsive. The inquiry is not directed to ICANN's U.S. government lobbying, but instead, ICANN's activities outside the U.S., the specifics of which ICANN refuses to disclose]. 


Final note: on January 28, 2016, Mike Silber, ICANN Board Member responded by email:
"Hi John
On 27/01/2016 20:12, John Poole wrote: [DomainMondo.com Editor’s Note: Question was submitted via email, October 21, 2015 (US time), approximately 12 hours before the Public Forum commenced.] Thank you for the clarification. Let me see if those type of questions (dense, but well thought out) can be easily accessed prior to the start of the public forum, so we don't deflect."

Now that ICANN and ICANN President and CEO Fadi Chehade have been called to account by U.S.Senators Cruz, Lankford, and Lee, it will be interesting to see how ICANN and its CEO try to avoid the truth and evade accountability, once again. To get full answers to the questions raised above will, apparently, require a U.S. Senate or House investigation, and a Federal Government Audit--Federal Government Contractors are subject to audits performed by a U.S.Government agency such as the Government Accountability Office (GAO)--as well as an IRS (Internal Revenue Service) audit of ICANN's finances for the entire time (2012-2016) Fadi Chehade has been President and CEO of ICANN.

Frankly, none of this bodes well for the IANA stewardship transition. The "accountability mechanisms" proposed by the hardworking sub-group of the ICANN community (CCWG-Accountability) though well-intentioned, are immensely inferior to the accountability mechanisms of the U.S. government as indicated above. Add to that the inept or mostly passive ICANN Board of Directors who allow ICANN staff to run unchecked under the leadership of a CEO unqualified for the position--who himself carved out most of the core functions of ICANN (including the critical IANA functions--see below) into a new "Global Domains Division" (GDD) and put his crony who got him the job at ICANN in charge--allowing the CEO to spend most of his time globetrotting, dabbling in geo-politics, and self-promotion--setting himself up for his post-ICANN career "portfolio".

ICANN organizational chart, p. 5 (pdf) 06/01/2015: The IANA department is part of the Global Domains Division (GDD)
Elise Gerich, VP of IANA, reports to Akram Atallah, GDD President, who reports to ICANN CEO Fadi Chehade
Next post on Domain Mondo: Is ICANN Too Broken To Be Reformed? A Question from CCWG Mail List

See also on Domain Mondo:



DISCLAIMER

2015-10-23

ICANN Lobbying, Conflicts, Ethics, Transparency, Accountability, Disclosure

The word "lobbying" was used 22 times yesterday at the ICANN 54 Public Forum in Dublin, Ireland--the first 3 times in the question asked via email by the editor of Domain Mondo. The next 10 times in interchanges between Kieren McCarthy and ICANN CEO Fadi Chehade. The video of the Public Forum and the transcript excerpts of the above are at the Domain Mondo post: ICANN 54 Public Forum Video, Q&A, ICANN, INTA, IANA, Lobbyists.

The final 9 uses of the word "lobbying" were by Rick Lane, Sr. Vice President Government Affairs at 21st Century Fox, and member of the ICANN Business Constituency, who spoke in response to Fadi's "give and take about lobbying" referenced above [Lane starts @03:34:46 on the livestream video here] (emphasis added)

Thank you. My name is Rick Lane I’m with 21st Century Fox. I wanted to respond to Fadi's give and take about lobbying and he's factually accurate which is there are definitions of what is lobbying. The Lobbying Disclosure Act [LDA] has a very narrow definition. And the money you report is very limited to your actual lobbying of Capitol Hill. Also requires that you lobby on -- you list what issues you have lobbied on. So the IANA transition. But then it's very broad in who you lobbied. House, Senate, NTIA, Department of Commerce. The next one that he showed was the tax form. Tax form is much broader. Includes grass-roots lobbying, so if you're trying to get other groups to join you and you're paying those groups. Also includes state lobbying.

The third one is the Foreign Agents Registration Act. That's the one that the U.S. uses where if you are representing a foreign government in front of the U.S. Congress or any agencies, you have to file with the Justice Department. The reason for that is that the Justice Department and Congress and American people want to know if there is undue influence by foreign governments on the U.S. Congress. Those filings are very detailed. They include who you met with, how much money you spent on expenditures, what you talked about, and I think that's what this community is more looking for. Not the LDA or your -- your tax because those are just dollar amounts. They're not really meaningful. What's really meaningful is what were the issues discussed? What were the resources? And the other important thing to know is those filings are only U.S. centric. And ICANN has told us over and over they are about the world. And we like that. So if you're only filing about what you're doing in the U.S., what about meetings in China, Brazil, Argentina? Anyplace else in the world that doesn't have by their federal laws the requirements to register lobbyists or require those expenditures.

So I think what we're asking and the B.C. asked this in its recent filing [timer sounds ] that we want to add an additional bylaw that requires ICANN or any individual acting on ICANN's behalf to make periodic public disclosures of their contacts with any government official as well as activities, receipts, and disbursements in support of those activities. Disclosure of those would enable the entire community to evaluate the statements and activities of such persons in their role as representing ICANN and in fact the ICANN community. So the answers were very narrow that Fadi gave about U.S. lobbying law, which I'm in charge of our lobbying ethics and lobbying filings so I know them very well. But we're talking very broad.

Wolfgang Kleinwachter: I think your point is clear and Steve [Crocker, ICANN Board Chairman] will react.

Steve Crocker: Thank you. Thank you very much for your speech. We’ll look into this.

Rick Lane: And hopefully it's part of Work Stream 1 and included as part of the bylaws. Thank you.

Fadi Chehade: Sorry, if I may just clarify, we do not have lobbyists that we don't disclose. Period. Let’s just be very clear. Any lobbyist we pay is disclosed.

Right but --

Fadi Chehade: all the lobbyists we have in the U.S. --

Steve Crocker: Fadi --

Fadi Chehade: This is an important point because there's a definition of lobbyists but it's not people who influence outside of the U.S.

Steve Crocker: Stop. Please stop.

Fadi Chehade: This is actually wrong.

Steve Crocker: Please stop. Thank you.

Wolfgang Kleinwachter: By the way, your speech is on the record so it means everybody can read it.



Methinks Fadi doth protest too much--what's ICANN CEO Fadi Chehade trying to hide? 




DISCLAIMER

2015-10-22

ICANN 54 Public Forum Video, Q&A, ICANN, INTA, IANA, Lobbyists



Q: “We have a question actually, series of questions from John Poole, the editor of domainmondo.com. As disclosed by Professor Milton Mueller in a tweet dated October 14, 2015, when exactly did ICANN join INTA whose membership list is not public? How much has ICANN paid INTA including membership dues? Please identify the ICANN officer who authorized this transaction. and what other lobbying organizations ICANN has joined as a member, the date it joined, the ICANN officer who authorized each identified transaction, and whether and when the ICANN Board of Directors was informed of any of these transactions and the reason none of these memberships have been heretofore disclosed by ICANN. Whether ICANN ever inquired of legal counsel whether such membership in own nonprofits -- excuse me, in such advocacy and lobbying organizations were violative of ICANN's own nonprofit status under California law or the Internal Revenue service Code of the United States of America, whether ICANN has in place an ethics code or conflict of interest policy for the ICANN corporation, its staff and officers which would bar ICANN from expending funds or becoming a member of such an advocacy or lobbying organization, or collaborating with such organizations' members who regularly engage in advocacy concerning issues within ICANN's mission and purpose. And finally explain how ICANN, its staff and officers are now [not] disqualified from participating in any ICANN rights protections review, particularly after ICANN staff “coached” INTA membership how to lobby ICANN in the upcoming rights protection review as revealed in the article cited by Professor Mueller." 

>>Mike Silber [ICANN Board Member]: If I can possibly intervene on that question before we hand over to staff, if they have a more substantive review. I think there were a lot of very dense questions asked over there. And it's incredibly difficult if somebody's expecting an answer to that series of questions, having been read out scrolling up on the screen, to actually answer all of that comprehensively. So can I really suggest that if you want to ask that sort of multi-part question in this sort of forum, you send it through way ahead of time so that staff have an opportunity to prepare the detailed responses? Because I don't think it's capable of being answered on the cuff. And then when we say we'll get back to you, then people get upset with us. So really, help us to help you in the form that questions are asked. If you want a general answer, I think we can ask staff to address that question, but if you want those detailed responses to each and every sub item of the question, let's make take that part of it offline.

[DomainMondo.com Editor’s Note: Question was submitted via email, October 21, 2015 (US time), approximately 12 hours before the Public Forum commenced.]

[in the Chat window at this point: - (10/22/2015 08:25) John Berryhill [Attorney for Domain Name Registrants in many UDRPs]: shorter - "why did icann join an org that lobbies icann?"]

>>Erika Mann {ICANN Board Member Chairing this part of the Forum]: Fadi --
>>Fadi Chehade: shall I answer this in arabic?
>>Erika Mann: Yes, we had an exchange on the Board, so please give the answer.

>>Fadi Chehade: So I think following my colleague's good comment, we promise to take the transcript of this question and to get back to the -- ask the person who laid it out with an answer. but at least the high-level -- if I could just give a high-level view of this, we have joined INTA as a nonprofit organization status which costs us 600 U.S. dollars per year. It gives ICANN employees that are interested in utilizing professional educational programs the ability to access the many, many INTA publications and resources, and to also receive significant discounts when attending INTA meetings. So we do have staff members and Board Members who have individually and on behalf of ICANN attended and participated in open conferences of INTA for many years. This is way before, you know, I started. So this has been an established activity. INTA meetings and conferences frankly offer us something specific called continued -- continuing legal education which is required, and ICANN has over 20 attorneys across our staff who, by requirements of the bar, need to continue their education. and so they use this very small fee to basically access a vast amount of courses. It saves us, all of us, a lot of money for them to get this access. Now, I just want to be clear that ICANN has not taken any position on any INTA policies, has not. And we have not attempted to influence or develop INTA policy positions. Now, as an INTA member we are entitled to one vote out of something like 1,000 at meetings of the association. but ICANN -- [bell ] but ICANN has not exercised that right ever. So just to be clear on it. however, the questions were numerous. we will take them and address them fully to the person who sent the question. thank you.

>>Erika Mann: thank you.

[Later in the Public Forum meeting]

>>Brad White: a question from Kieren McCarthy directed to Fadi Chehade. At the last public forum at Buenos AiresIasked if ICANN would provide details for the lobbyists in washington, dc and how much they paid them. fadi said he would provide those in an email. unfortunatelyIhave not received an email. I have since done some research. i can provide records about public law. the amount it spent on lobbying in its tax forms. According to those records ICANN has hired three main lobbyists, including one staffer, and spent $576,000 in 2014. However, it is also the case that ICANN has hired a significant number of other lobbyists over the IANA transition and has used a loophole in congressional rules to not publicly disclose them. most significantly ICANN has hired at the cost of millions of dollars Stephen Hadley and former secretary of state madeleine Albright, ICANN hires further three lobbyists including three former senior commerce staff. while ICANN ensure that is the community does all of its work on the IANA transition in public and with full transparency and considering that ICANN has specifically raised concerns about the money being spent on legal advice for the accountability working group, will ICANN commit to being similarly transparent about the people it hires to carry out its work and the amount of money it spends on their services? as a specific suggestion, ICANN could live up to its stated goals of transparency by introducing a budget line item simply called "lobbying" and introduce the real amount it spends on outside lobbying companies. Will ICANN staff commit to this same level of openness that it demands of its community? 
[applause ] [timer sounds ] 
>>Fadi Chehade: Kieren, I had asked you to send me a letter asking me for what you want and you never did. So I ask you again, in front of the whole community, to please write down exactly what you're looking for, if this is what you just asked, great. If you want to publish an article with the question, do. Send me the question, and we'll answer you. It’s that simple. But we did not get a formal request from you. We told you at the time everything we do is on the web site. It is on the web site. That’s how you found your numbers. That’s how you gave the facts you just did. So we are transparent. So please, if you have specific requests, send them in writing.

In the Chat Window:
Kieren McCarthy: The only thing Chehade said was: "We'll send the answer by email and help him find the links."
….
Kieren McCarthy: Follow up question send in: A quick follow up on Fadi Chehade's response to my question.Mr Chehade said that he had asked me to send an email asking for details and that ICANN had not received one, so no information on the money spent on lobbyists has been sent. Unfortunately that is simply not true. If you look at the transcript of the forum, the sole response was: "We'll send the answer by email and help him find the links."So two questions: 1. Does ICANN believe it is only obliged to provide information over how it spends its money in response to community demands ? 2. Will ICANN commit to the same level of openness that it demands of its community by introducing a budget line called "Lobbying" and introduce the real amount it spends on outside lobbying companies? Thank you.

>>REMOTE INTERVENTION: FIRST QUESTION IS FROM KIEREN McCARTHY. A QUICK FOLLOW UP ON FADI CHEHADE'S RESPONSE TO MY QUESTION. MR. CHEHADE SAID HE HAD ASKED ME TO SEND AN EMAIL ASKING FOR DETAILS AND ICANN HAD NOT SEEN ONE SO NO INFORMATION ON INFORMATION TO SPENT. THAT'S NOT TRUE T. SOLE RESPONSE WAS WE'LL SEND THE ANSWER MY EMAIL AND HELP MINIMUM FIND THE LINKS. SO TWO QUESTIONS, ONE, DOES ICANN BELIEVE IT IS ONLY OBLIGATED TO PROVIDE INFORMATION OVER HOW IT SPENDS ITS MONEY IN RESPONSE TO COMMUNITY DEMANDS. TWO, WILL ICANN COMMIT TO THE SAME LEVEL OF OPENNESS THAT IT DEMANDS OF ITS COMMUNITY BY INTRODUCING A BUDGETS LINE ITEM CALLED LOBBYING AND INTRODUCE THE REAL AMOUNT IT SPENDS ON OUTSIDE LOBBYING COMPANIES?

>>WOLFGANG KLEINWACHTER: OKAY, FADI, CAN YOU RESPOND ONCE AGAIN?

>>FADI CHEHADE: SURE. MR. McCARTHY, LET ME SET THE RECORD STRAIGHT AGAIN, WE HAVE PUBLISHED THE LINKS AND A TWEET AS WE SAID. IF YOU HAD MORE QUESTIONS, YOU SHOULD SEND THEM. YOUR QUESTION EARLIER, YOU SHOULD KNOW, WAS NOT ACCURATE. IT INCLUDED MANY MANGLED FACTS. FOR EXAMPLE, YOU LISTED COMPANIES LIKE RGM, THE COMPANY OF CONDOLEEZZA RICE AS A LOBBYIST. THEY'RE NOT LOBBYISTS. YOU'RE MIXING THINGS. SO THAT'S WHY I SAID SEND US A VERY CLEAR LETTER, EXACTLY WHAT IS IT YOU NEED, AND WE'LL BE VERY HAPPY TO ANSWER YOU CLEARLY.

AND IN TERMS OF DETAILS, JUST FOR THE REST OF THE COMMUNITY, OUR LOBBYING ACTIVITIES BY LAW NEED TO BE DISCLOSED. WE DISCLOSE THEM. THEY'RE ON OUR WEB SITE. COULD YOU SHOW THE LINK, PLEASE? IF YOU GO TO OUR WEB SITE, YOU SO PICK UP STRAIGHT FROM OUR 990 FORM EXACTLY HOW MUCH WE SPENT LAST YEAR ON LOBBYING. THIS YEAR, WE'RE ON TRACK TO SPEND A LITTLE MORE THAN THAT, CLOSE TO $700 THOUSAND. AND BY NEXT YEAR, MY GUESS AFTER THE TRANSITION IS THAT THESE COST WILLS PROBABLY BE HALVED. SO THIS IS JUST TO GIVE YOU A SENSE THAT THIS INFORMATION IS OUT THERE.

NOW, YOU HAD MIXED OTHER FIRMS WE USE, CONSULTANTS, PROFESSIONAL SERVICES, AND THOSE COSTS ARE PART OF THE TRANSITION. SO IF YOU GO TO THE SECOND LINK, PLEASE SAVE YAY, YOU WILL SEE ALSO THAT WE PUBLIC ALL OF OUR COSTS ON THE TRANSITION. IT'S ON OUR WEB SITE. I KNOW YOU KNOW WHERE THEY ARE. AND EVERYBODY KNOWS HOW TO FIND THEM. PLEASE GO LOOK AT THEM. AND IF WE NEED TO PROVIDE MORE DATA, WE'RE HAPPY TO DO SO. SO PLEASE, IF THERE ARE FURTHER QUESTIONS, WE'LL BE VERY HAPPY TO ANSWER THEM. BUT LOBBYING IS LOBBYING. IT'S DEFINED AS WORKING WITH PEOPLE THAT HELP US WITH GOVERNMENT AFFAIRS. AND THAT LOBBYING IS DISCLOSED FULLY CLEARLY. OTHER ACTIVITIES ARE ALSO DISCLOSED AS PART OF OUR PROJECTS, AND IF WE CAN BE FURTHER CLEAR TO YOU, DON'T HESITATE TO LET ME KNOW.

[TIMER SOUNDS ]


See also on Domain Mondo: ICANN Lobbying, Conflicts, Ethics, Transparency, Accountability, Disclosure 23 Oct 2015



DISCLAIMER

2015-04-06

The REAL Domain Hogs: ICANN Officers, Staff, Lavish Pay, Benefits, Accountability Risks Institutionalized

UPDATE: US Workers with Annual Earnings* over $118,500: 6.19%;
over $250,000: 1.5%
and over $400,000: 0.7% 
*2014 analysis, source: Table 1, Center for Economic and Policy Research

Background: Domain Name Registrants, directly and indirectly, pay for ICANN's lavish excesses--.COM registrants, for example, pay ICANN (the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers) a mandatory annual fee of $0.18 for each domain registration, renewal or transfer, and yet have no representation within ICANN, no Registrants stakeholder group , unlike registry operators and registrars who are over-represented, well-resourced, special interest lobbyists-legislators-stakeholders in the ICANN organization. Adding insult to injury, the ICANN CEO earlier this year made a splash by criticizing domain name registrants for "hogging" names. Then late on Good Friday, April 3, 2015, ICANN tried to "bury" its Form 990 announcement--
ICANN FY14 Form 990 Announcement - ICANN: "ICANN filed its Form 990 for the fiscal year ending June 30, 2014 with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) on March 31, 2015 in compliance with the extended due date of May 15, 2015. The Form 990 is the United States return for organizations exempt from income taxes under section 501(c) of the Internal Revenue Code. ICANN continues to provide accountability and transparency regarding its financial results and the filed Form 990 is available on the "Financial Information for ICANN" page of the ICANN.org site and is also included in this announcement. ICANN's FY14 Form 990 [PDF, 428 KB] is now posted and is available to the community. The Community is invited to review ICANN's Form 990 and to provide commentaries and/or questions."

Forget about the "non-profit" status of ICANN, you really don't have to look far to see who is "profiting" from the ICANN monopoly, from inside the non-profit, non-membership California corporation--but first beware the "fine print" of ICANN FY2014 (thru 6/30/2014)--we are really talking calendar year 2013--[Supplemental Note to ICANN FORM 990, SCHEDULE J, PART I, LINE 1A: AMOUNTS LISTED IN PART VII OF FORM 990 AND SCHEDULE J REPRESENT AMOUNTS FOR THE 2013 CALENDAR YEAR.] (ICANN source: Schedule J (Form 990) 2013 Page 3, Part III Supplemental Information of the ICANN Form 990 for FY2014)

Who knows the total remuneration ICANN paid its Domain Hog officers and staffers in calendar year 2014? Wait another year and you might find out in 2016. **2015?--you may find out in 2017. ICANN accountability in action! In any event, ICANN's FY2014 Form 990 (listing amounts for Calendar Year 2013) shows ICANN's #1 "Domain Hog" is Fadi Chehade (2013 total: $899,080) followed by #2, surprise, surprise, Akram Atallah (2013 total $713,464). Remember it was Akram who got Fadi hired* as ICANN CEO! After becoming CEO, Fadi Chehade then promoted Akram Atallah to the newly created the job of President, Global Domains Division, and now both are feasting at the trough--and this is only 2013 remuneration--add 2014 and 2015, and you see what making real money off a non-profit organization is all about!
*ICANN, ICAN'T, IWON'T: uWHAT? How the internet is actually run • The Register, Nov 3, 2014: "Chehade was himself brought into ICANN by his former co-worker and COO Akram Atallah. Grogan will take over from Maguy Serad, who was hired by Atallah as senior compliance director and then promoted to veep on Chehade's first day as CEO. The choice of Serad wasn't popular with compliance staff, who complained she had little experience in compliance work. Serad is the wife of a former co-worker of both Chehade and Atallah, Roger Serad." (emphasis added)
But wait, the story gets even better--
Internet group picks little-known exec [Fadi Chehade] as CEO – USATODAY.com 6/22/2012 : "Atallah, the No. 2 executive at ICANN, was Chehade's deputy at CoreObjects. They had also known each other as children; both served in the boy scouts in Lebanon."
You can't make this stuff up! LOL!

ICANN claims its remuneration is "market based," but no one really believes that, not even Emily Taylor"ICANN’s generous pay and reward schemes, coupled with difficulties in finding comparable employed positions elsewhere in the small domain name policy space, can become drivers against transparency. Analysis of ICANN’s audited accounts and filed IRS 990 forms show that from 2011 to 2013, the average salary per person at ICANN was above $170,000. Excluding highest-paid executives (as declared on the form), average pay still exceeded $138,000, and across the staff base, salaries increased by between 11 and 16 percent in fiscal years 2012 and 2013, against US inflation rates of three percent or lower. Employee benefits are exceptionally generous, including full health care, and a pension contribution of up to 15 percent of salary... There are powerful financial and social drivers  for staff to stay in position, and not to place their employment at risk by raising concerns." (source: ICANN: Bridging the Trust Gap, p.10) (emphasis added)

But with no membership having standing to sue ICANN Directors for breach of their fiduciary duties, ICANN is wide open for this kind of "profiteering" (and yes, even some ICANN Directors included). Again, from Ms. Taylor's report:
ICANN as a corporation is a largely unregulated, private sector body with control over critical Internet resources on which global economies depend. It has no natural competitors, is cash-rich (in 2014, its current assets were more than $350 million, with a further $145 million in deferred income), and directly or indirectly supports many of its participants and other Internet governance processes.Without effective accountability and transparency mechanisms, the opportunities for distortion, even corruption, are manifold. In such an environment, it is not sufficient simply to invoke trust (emphasis added)
And of course, with all of the activity of the IANA stewardship transition, there's this little gem:
LOBBYING EXPENDITURES - SCHEDULE C PART II-B:
THE ORGANIZATION UTILIZED THE SERVICES OF A STAFF REGISTERED LOBBYIST AND TWO GOVERNMENT AFFAIRS FIRMS DURING THE YEAR ENDED JUNE 30, 2014, FOR A COST OF $576,138."
(source: ICANN, Form 990, FY ending June 30, 2014).
So what to make of all this in the midst of the IANA stewardship transition and ICANN accountability processes? Domain Mondo is reminded of the old American saying:

Caveat Emptor!




**ICANN disclosure of Chehade and Atallah compensation (pdf), November 1, 2014: 
President and Chief Executive Officer - Fadi Chehadé was appointed ICANN’s President and Chief Executive Officer, as well as a member of the Board of Directors, effective 14 September 2012. Mr. Chehadé entered into an employment agreement with ICANN effective 14 September 2012 ending 30 June 2015. This agreement has been extended to 30 June 2017. Under the terms of the agreement, Mr. Chehadé is to be paid a base salary of US$630,000 per year, is eligible for additional at-risk compensation of up to US$270,000 per year, and is provided reasonable coverage under vacation, health and welfare plans including medical, dental, vision, life insurance and a 401(k) retirement plan that ICANN makes available to all its U.S. based employees.President, Global Domains Division - Mr. Akram Atallah was appointed as Chief Operating Officer effective 20 September 2010, he also served as President and Chief Executive Officer from 1 July 2012 through 14 September 2012, and was appointed as President, Global Domains Division in June 2013. Since 1 July 2014, Mr. Atallah’s compensation has consisted of a base salary of US$481,390.00 per year, eligibility for additional at-risk compensation of up to 30 percent of base per year, and reasonable coverage under vacation, health and welfare plans including medical, dental, vision, life insurance and a 401(k) retirement plan that ICANN makes available to all its U.S. based employees.

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