Showing posts with label monopoly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label monopoly. Show all posts

2019-06-17

Greycroft's Alan Patricof on Big Tech & Antitrust Concerns (video)

The big tech companies are smothering small start-ups. Minor changes to a platform’s algorithms can harm a business’s traffic overnight.--Alan Patricof, Silicon Valley VC
Greycrofts' Patricof: There are legitimate antitrust concerns surrounding big tech

Washington is taking aim at big tech, and Amazon, Apple, Google, and Facebook could be vulnerable to antitrust actions. Alan Patricof, co-founder and managing partner at Greycroft Ventures (greycroft.com), joins the discussion on CNBC's "Squawk Box." CNBC Television video  above published Jun 6, 2019.

"Let’s face it, the Internet is a utility and so are the corporations who control it .... Technology needs to be regulated."--Alan Patricof.

Alan Patricof, April 10, 2019:
"From my vantage point in the venture capital industry, it is apparent that many start-ups are failing or changing their business models because of their dependence on Amazon, Facebook or Google. The situation has progressed to the point where venture capitalists discount companies that rely on a digital platform to reach their markets."





feedback & comments via twitter @DomainMondo


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2019-05-26

News Review | Law Firm Conflicts of Interest in ICANN GNSO EPDP

graphic "News Review" ©2016 DomainMondo.com
Domain Mondo's weekly internet domain news review (NR 2019-05-26) with analysis and opinion: Features • 1) Law Firm Conflicts of Interest in ICANN GNSO EPDP, EPDP Meeting May 302) a. ICANN Board Report, b. .AMAZON Call to Action, c. Root Server System,  3) a. The Power of .COM, b. Verisign $VRSN, c. Tucows $TCX, 4)ICYMI: DNS Hijacking, and more, 5) Most Read.

1) Law Firm Conflicts of Interest in ICANN GNSO EPDP
May 2, 2019, EPDP Meeting (chat transcript excerpt below) re: Bird & Bird legal memos:
EPDP Meeting May 2, 2019, Notes and Action Items: Questions for ICANN Org: "Is there an attorney-client relationship between ICANN Org and Bird & Bird?
"

Answer May 23, 2019 from ICANN Org: "In light of your recent question, “Is there an attorney-client relationship between ICANN Org and Bird & Bird,” and related communications on the EPDP Team list, we wanted to provide this background. ICANN org retained the law firm of Bird & Bird as an additional expert to help advise on GDPR matters, including advising the EPDP Team. There is an attorney-client relationship between ICANN org and Bird & Bird. In connection with this engagement, Bird & Bird is providing analysis on issues related to the EPDP’s work that is being shared with the EPDP Team. In announcing this engagement to the EPDP [Legal] Team, ICANN org noted that ICANN has used the services of Bird & Bird in the past in a similar engagement, in providing public advice to the community Thick WHOIS Implementation Review Team. Given the positive experience with working with Bird & Bird on that public advice, Bird & Bird’s understanding of ICANN and its ecosystem, as well as its deep expertise in international privacy and data protection matters, ICANN org determined that the Bird & Bird team could help provide additional expertise to advance the efforts of ICANN org and the GNSO Expedited PDP Team. Members of the EPDP Team’s legal committee proposed using the same independent outside counsel for both the EPDP Team and ICANN Org. To that end, in the “Considerations for Procurement of Legal Services” document compiled by Kurt Pritz, the Phase 1 Chair [Editor's note: Kurt Pritz is ICANN's 'King' of secret undisclosed conflicts of interest], which incorporated the Statement of Work [pdf, highlighting and bold added] written by Stephanie Perrin and Diane Plaut, as well as a note on Conflict (by Margie Milam), and on possible efficiencies by Thomas Rickert, it was noted that the same outside counsel could be used for both the EPDP Team and ICANN org. The notes to ICANN included in the “Considerations” document stated that it was the EPDP Team’s belief that both ICANN org and the EPDP Team would require answers to the same or similar questions and that, therefore, reaching out to one firm might avoid duplicate costs and also potentially conflicting advice. I hope that this background is helpful. Please let us know if you have further questions or wish to discuss this topic further."--ICANN Org liaisons Trang Nguyen and Dan Halloran. (emphasis. link, and [notes], added)

Excerpt from that Kurt Pritz email of Jan 7, 2019 to Dan Halloran (ICANN legal) referenced above:
"... To the Legal Team, I apologize that this document does not encompass all the thought that has gone into this effort or did not consult with you on this document but I wanted to get something to ICANN to expedite the procurement."
Editor's note: this is another example of the dysfunctional EPDP Phase 1 chaired by Kurt Pritz, as enabled by GNSO Council and ICANN Org, now bogging down Phase 2, as indicated herein, and here and here.

Excerpt from the aforesaid Statement of Work:
Follow-up on the EPDP public mail list from Stephanie Perrin (NCSG), May 24, 2019:
"Thanks for this explanation Marika [email above from ICANN Org liaisons Trang Nguyen and Dan Halloran]. What is the precise date of the previous engagement with Bird and Bird re Thick transition?  I would point out that while you put my name first, I was not the principal penholder on that document [Statement of Work (SOW)], Diane [Plaut] did all the heavy lifting. I think a few learnings discussed prior to jumping into phase 2 might be helpful here.  Some have been addressed already no doubt, but forgive me for repeating them in this roundup:
1.  We have asked some remarkably basic questions in the past. (e.g. to Chris Kuner in the RDS group days).  This is a waste of money in my view.  We need to focus on good questions.  The legal subcommittee is helpful in weeding these unfortunate questions out, but the committee as a whole need to also vet the questions.
2.  We need to watch very carefully for hidden policy decisions/assumptions, both in the legal questions we ask, and in the technical approaches we assume we are taking, that are in fact resting on policy decisions/assumptions that have not been approved by the GNSO Council.  In my opinion, a test should be applied as we go through our work to help discern these buried assumptions. Should not be hard to develop this, and would prevent us having to constantly rehash things.
Update: and this from Ayden Férdeline (NCSG) on May 25, 2019:
"I have been reviewing the legal subcommittee's mailing list in order to better understand how this situation has arisen, and I came across [this email](https://mm.icann.org/pipermail/gnso-epdp-legal/2019-January/000012.html) from the previous Chair (emphasis added): "To keep the ball rolling on the procurement of legal services, I am attaching a document to aid in the effort. ... To the Legal Team, I apologize that this document does not encompass all the thought that has gone into this effort or did not consult with you on this document but I wanted to get something to ICANN to expedite the procurement."
"Given the situation we find ourselves in now, I am hoping someone may be able to clarify what input from the legal subcommittee on the matter of legal services procurement was not taken forward. I am quite out of the loop as to how the legal subcommittee interacts with outside counsel, and so I am hoping someone can also clarify for me what interactions the subcommittee has (if any) with Bird and Bird directly? I imagine it would be helpful and most efficient for there to be a continuous, factual dialogue between the subcommittee (as client) and Bird and Bird (as attorneys). I'm not sure that's happening, or can happen, if the client is instead ICANN org. We might want to consider what a better mechanism may be to facilitate factual dialogue between the subcommittee and Bird and Bird moving forward. And I really want to emphasize that this should be factual dialogue so that all the facts are on the table, and not an opportunity for any stakeholders to attempt to persuade external counsel to take a particular position." (emphasis added)
See Domain Mondo's News Review ... 2) EPDP Needs Independent Legal Counsel (March 31, 2019):
"... Editor's note: the most recent Bird & Bird memo dated 8 Mar 2019 "Advice on the legal basis for transferring Thick WHOIS" is indicative of the problems in having the EPDP team use ICANN Org's counsel (Bird & Bird) for legal advice. This March 8th memo is troublesome, in part, because it appears to approach its analysis cognizant of ICANN Org's known preference for a thick Whois model, and states one or more substantive factual errors ...."
EPDP Meeting May 30at 14:00 UTC (agenda, etc., here), audiocast (in browser). Notes and action items from May 23, 2019, meeting. EPDP meeting recordings and transcripts (when available) are posted on the GNSO calendar. EPDP Links: wiki, public mail list, GNSO mail list, and worksheets. Editor's note: the audiocast was not working after approximately the first hour of the meeting. Observers can review the transcript next week and view the Zoom video (when available links will be on GNSO calendar). May 30 meeting notes and action items will be posted at some point after the meeting.
Note also
  • 23 May 2019 Letter from RrSG Chair Graeme Bunton to ICANN GDD Sr VP Cyrus Namazi: "I'm pleased to inform you that the Registrar Stakeholder Group has again decided to voluntarily extend the specification for Privacy and Proxy services contained within the 2013 RAA for 19 months, with a new expiry date of Jan 31, 2021. The RrSG recognizes that considerable work has gone into both the policy development process and the implementation process for a new Privacy and Proxy service regime. We also appreciate the community's patience as Registrars, ICANN org, and the rest of the community work to resolve tensions between the PPSAI disclosure framework, GDPR, and the work of the EPDP phase 2. It is in acknowledgement of this continued work that we have decided to continue to extend the specification."
".... In the year since it went into effect, GDPR has been an important catalyst for progress in privacy protection. Countries around the world have implemented new laws that reflect the new understanding people have for privacy in our digital era. Some companies are doing a better job of handling sensitive personal data and they have delivered new tools that make it easier for people to manage and control their personal information. Now it is time for Congress to take inspiration from the rest of the world and enact federal legislation that extends the privacy protections in GDPR to citizens in the United States."
  • New cyber insurance platform offers quotes using single piece of data--the domain name--canadianunderwriter.ca: "... one question – which is their domain name, their web address, their URL – and we are using that information to instantly digitally footprint the organization,” Graeme Newman, CFC’s chief innovation officer, told Canadian Underwriter.We can get this huge volume of data, all within a short space of time based on just one piece of information.” 
  • GDPR fines levied so far: The lessons businesses can learn--techrepublic.com: "... storing over nine million records of personal contact information on its information technology systems that it no longer needed. The data should have been deleted after it was no longer needed for regular business purposes, as described by the GDPR, but the company failed to comply ..."

2) Other ICANN News
graphic "ICANN | Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers"
a. ICANN Executive Team Report to the ICANN Board April 2019 (pdf) 75 pp.
 ICANN Executive Team Report to the ICANN Board April 2019
As of 31 December 2018, ICANN org had 390 active staff, 74% in North America, 10% in Europe, 7% in the Middle East & Africa, 7% in Asia Pacific, 3% in Latin America & Caribbean (p.4).
"TOP ISSUES & MITIGATION: Following Akram Attalah’s departure, I appointed Cyrus Namazi to the newly created position of Senior Vice President of the Global Domains Division (GDD). I’ve also tasked David Conrad, Chief Technology Officer (CTO), with permanently overseeing the IANA services."--Goran Marby, ICANN President & CEO (p. 3).
Funds under management (p.72 of 75) in millions USD, unaudited:

b. .AMAZON Call to Action
ICANN’s final decision is a disappointment for ACTO, the coalition of South American countries which had rejected what it called “the monopoly of one company” and the “appropriation” of the “geographical names of the states, without their due consent,” arguing the nations had a right to participate in the domain’s governance. The Ecuadorean ambassador to the US wrote to ICANN's GAC Chair in March (pdf), saying the coalition was “not looking for financial compensation,” but that the matter was one of “sovereignty.” See also Amazon wins domain name dispute with Latin American governments--ft.com, and Retailer Amazon nears victory in rainforest battle over domain name--reuters.com: "Amazon basin countries Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, Venezuela, Guyana and Suriname have argued that it ["Amazon"] refers to their geographic region and should not be the monopoly of one company" (emphasis added).

Editor's note: In addition, the .AMAZON applications now violate Specification 13 and ICANN is in violation of its Articles and Bylaws by failing to properly publish for public comment the recent PICs proposed by applicant Amazon EU S.à r.l:
 ICANN "this page does not exist"

FastCompany.com: "Now’s your chance to tell ICANN how you feel about Amazon’s domain battle with the rain forest"--excerpt below from comments being filed at ICANN:
 Comments re: .AMAZON at ICANN.org (graphic)

Editor's note: and then we have this written by a former ICANN Board member who doesn't even know what the acronym 'ICANN' stands for.  As I've said before [2) .AMAZON], the .BRAND new gTLD program was a MISTAKE from the beginning, a CORRUPTION of "the concept of generic top-level domains (gTLDs) as set forth in RFC 1591 written by Jon Postel, which predates the formation of ICANN and its "Californication" of the internet and global DNS. I'm with the South American countries. ICANN should do the "right thing" for once and end the .BRAND gTLD program, refund the application fees, and "undelegate" all .BRAND gTLDs from the internet "root," while allowing every owner of a distinctive trademark to block use of that mark as a gTLD in the future. End the ICANN extortion racket -- see .PING testimony."

"A "brand" or "trademark" is neither a "monopoly" nor "generic." ICANN's .BRAND new gTLDs program is both ill-conceived and corrupt."

See also Amazon Is Flooding D.C. With Money and Muscle: The Influence Game--bloomberg.com. Amazon.com, Inc., lobbied “more government entities than any other tech company in 2018 ... Over the last six years, Amazon has increased lobbying spending by about 460%."

c. Evolving the Governance of the Root Server System--ICANN.org. Public Comment closes 9 Aug 2019.

3) Names, Domains & Trademarks
graphic "Names, Domains & Trademarks" ©2017 DomainMondo.com
a.  The Power of .COM--".COM has 39% market share [of all TLDs globally], is used by 69% of startups, and gets 82% of the funding!"-- see more herehere, and here.

b. Verisign $VRSN Registry Operator of .COM
$VRSN
Tracking Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Portfolio's $VRSN Holdings Q1 2019 Update--Berkshire's $VRSN shares were first purchased in Q4 2012 at prices between $34 and $49.50. The position was more than doubled in Q1 2013 at prices between $38 and $48. The buying continued till Q2 2014 at prices up to $63. The stock currently trades at ~$198, and the Berkshire position comprises 1.18%  of the Berkshire portfolio and about 10% of all Verisign shares.

c. Tucows $TCX Q1 2019: Management posted responses to follow-up questions on the Tucows  investor relations website, on Tuesday, May 21, 2019. The Q&A is available as an audio file or transcript. Excerpt re: acquisition of registrar ascio.com -- "Ascio contributes a little under $4 million in cash EBITDA on a run rate basis, and in addition, will provide synergies of a little over $1 million, through the next 12 to 18 months, from replacing overhead costs of the previous owners on a more cost effective basis, and being able to apply some of the talent in the Copenhagen office more broadly over the entire wholesale business." Editor's note$TCX was recently upgraded to Buy from Hold at Echelon.

4) ICYMI Internet Domain News 
graphic "ICYMI Internet Domain News" ©2017 DomainMondo.com
DNS Hijacking: What Is It and How Does It Work Anyway?--securityboulevard.com.

How (and Why) to Change Your DNS Server--the Domain Name System (DNS) is an essential part of internet communications. Upgrading to a better DNS server can make your surfing both faster and more secure.--pcmag.com.

U.S. declines to back Christchurch call to stamp out online extremism amid free speech concerns. See also Don't Let Zuckerberg Kill Free Speech--realclearpolitics.com.

China: Google’s Censored Search Engine Would Have Helped China “Be More Open,” said ex-CEO Eric Schmidt--theintercept.com. See also Great Firewall scorches China’s ‘open society’--asiatimes.com.

The Impermanent Internet--thesis: the permanent social internet is dying, the impermanent social internet will need to replace it, and it will be even more difficult to make money on such an internet than it was before--mikeisaac.substack.com.

5) 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

2019-04-28

News Review 1) .ORG Comments, 2) When To 'Short Sell' Verisign $VRSN

graphic "News Review" ©2016 DomainMondo.com
Domain Mondo's weekly internet domain news review (NR 2019-04-28) with analysis and opinion: Features • 1) .ORG Comments Close April 29, 2) a. When to 'Short Sell' Verisign $VRSN, b. Domain Industry Collapse? c. A Trademark Is NOT A Monopoly, 3) .AMAZON Chaos, 4) EPDP Phase 2 'Daunting Task Ahead' 5) ICYMI: Warning re: Google Chrome browser, and more, 6) Most Read.

1) Public Comments Closing Soon on .ORG, .INFO, .ASIA, and .BIZ
graphic "ICANN | Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers"
Public Comments close at ICANN at 23:59 UTC (7:59 pm EDT) on the respective dates shown for each issue below:
Editor's note:  say “No” to Unlimited Price Increases on .Org Domain Names (and other gTLDs).
  • Read the .ORG comments submitted here, [UPDATE: including my comment (pdf) embed below].
  • UPDATE: read the .INFO comments submitted here, including my comment (pdf).
UPDATE: .ORG comment from Editor of DomainMondo.com (w/o attachments filed with original but links to same--link updated to ICA comment after ICANN org changed the URL):

2) Names, Domains & Trademarks 
graphic "Names, Domains & Trademarks" ©2017 DomainMondo.com
a. When To Short Sell Verisign $VRSN: VeriSign $VRSN Q1 2019 Earnings Results: Verisign ended the first quarter of 2019 with a total of 154.8 million .com and .net domain name registrations in the domain name base, a 4.4 percent increase* from the end of the first quarter of 2018 (a net increase of 1.82 million during the first quarter of 2019), $1.25 billion in cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities, Q1 revenue of $306 million, up 2.4 percent YOY, net income of $163 million (vs  $134 million Q1 2018). Nothing new reported re: ongoing discussions with ICANN re .COM pricing or .WEB arbitration (IRP). More info at the link above. 

*Editor's note.net registrations have actually declined due to .net price gouging by both ICANN and Verisign (see also this News Review 4)a.), so all the growth is attributable to .com. Verisign shares are nearing their all-time highs of year 2000 (graphic below) when Verisign bought Network Solutions  (see archive.org) which at that time controlled .COM, .NET and .ORG, a virtual monopoly on all gTLD domain names. Verisign acquired Network Solutions for "$21 billion in [Verisign] stock" which afterwards declined over 96% in value:
$VRSN
Once ICANN is completely "successful" in trashing .COM the same way ICANN is now trying to trash .ORG--see feature #1 above--may be the time to "short sell" $VRSN shares (see also next note below).

b. Domain Industry Collapse? 75% of websites today are not active, but parked domains or similar--internetlivestats.com. Editor's note: "what's this mean?" It means that total domain name registrations today of about 350 million could drop (not be renewed, etc.) by more than 50%, and internet "end users" would not notice anything different. It means that ICANN policy of enabling each gTLD registry operator to unilaterally price gouge all gTLD domain name registrants will eventually backfire with severe consequences for both the domain name industry and ICANN.

c. A Trademark Is NOT A Monopoly: "Trademark rights actually arise based on use of the mark ... exclusive rights in a trademark are inextricably linked to the goods and services with which the mark is used. Except in rare circumstances, a trademark is not a monopoly that allows its owner to prevent others from using the same word(s) in all circumstances."--Hutchison PLLC.

3) More .AMAZON Chaos:
To ICANN Board Chair Cherine Chalaby: 
  • 23 April 2019 Letter from Achilles Zaluar, Department of Technological Promotion | Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Brazil; 
  • 23 April 2019 Letter from Brian Huseman,Vice President, Public Policy, Amazon.com, Inc., excerpt:  "the issue before the Board is to: 'make an objective and independent judgment regarding whether there are, in fact, well-founded, merits-based public policy reasons for denying Amazon’s applications.'
Editor's note: first, know that ICANN continuously misidentifies the applicant as "Amazon Corporation." The new gTLD .AMAZON applicant is Amazon EU S.à.r.l., a European legal entity owned, controlled, and formed by Amazon.com, Inc., primarily to dodge taxes.
"Amazon EU S.à.r.l. ... was incorporated in 2004 and is based in Luxembourg City, Luxembourg. Amazon EU S.à.r.l. operates as a subsidiary of Amazon.com Inc."--source.
Second, as I've said before, "the idea of having private .BRAND gTLDs was a mistake from the beginning, a corruption of the concept of generic top-level domains (gTLDs) as set forth in RFC 1591 written by Jon Postel, which predates the formation of ICANN and its "Californication" of the internet and global DNS. I'm with the South American countries. ICANN should do the "right thing" for once and end the .BRAND gTLD program, refund the application fees, and "undelegate" all .BRAND gTLDs from the internet "root," while allowing every owner of a distinctive trademark to block use of that mark as a gTLD in the future. End the ICANN extortion racket -- see .PING testimony."

4) EPDP Phase 2, The "Daunting Task Ahead"
UPDATE: First Meeting of  EPDP Phase 2, Thursday, May 2, 2019, at 14:00 UTC (10am EDT) but no video for observers, and transcript will be at least 72 hours delayed. Details of agenda and 'audiocast' here. Letter from Goran Marby (ICANN CEO) here (via GNSO Chair Keith Drazek).
Dear Members of the EPDP Team,
As I assume the duties of the Chair of the EPDP team of the second phase of the process, I would like to thank the GNSO Council for placing trust in me and appointing me to perform this important function. I also would like to pay tribute to the EPDP Team for the work accomplished during the first phase and their dedication to a task, which is far from trivial.
We have a daunting task ahead, which is exacerbated by the ambiguity surrounding the precise outline of implementation of the GDPR. We will be targeting a moving object as we develop the most effective way forward. It won’t be simple, but extremely interesting from a systemic point of view.
I hope that my previous experience in handling diplomatic negotiations in different circles at the UN as well as chairing the ICANN GAC from 2007 to 2010 will be beneficial for the team in advancing our objectives.
I have been with the Latvian diplomatic service for the past 27 years holding different positions in bilateral and multilateral settings. From 2000 to 2007, I was Latvian ambassador to the UN in Geneva and in that capacity was chosen to lead the preparations of the second phase of the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) that culminated with the adoption of the Tunis Agenda*, partly devoted to global Internet governance issues. Since then my activities have been linked, directly or indirectly, with ICANN, either chairing the GAC or engaging with ICANN in different UN fora (Internet Governance Forum, WSIS Forum or UN Commission on Science and Technology for Development). At the time of chairing the ICANN GAC, I was involved in the development of the IDN Fast Track policy and opening of the GAC meetings to the ICANN community.
I look forward working with the team as well as ICANN supporting staff and rely on team’s collective wisdom and desire to reach a successful outcome. As soon as all members of the team will be announced, we will start our substantive activities.
Thank you in advance, Janis Karklins, EPDP Phase 2 Chair22 Apr 2019 (emphasis added)
*Tunis Agenda"INTERNET GOVERNANCE 29. We reaffirm the principles enunciated in the Geneva phase of the WSIS, in December 2003, that the Internet has evolved into a global facility available to the public and its governance should constitute a core issue of the Information Society agenda. The international management of the Internet should be multilateral, transparent and democratic, with the full involvement of governments, the private sector, civil society and international organizations. It should ensure an equitable distribution of resources, facilitate access for all and ensure a stable and secure functioning of the Internet, taking into account multilingualism."

From the EPDP mail list: Professor Mueller schools Ambassador Karklins and ICANN Vice-Chair Chris Disspain:
Greetings, Janis
Welcome aboard!
Recalling your role as IGF Director I look forward to working with you. This job will require all of your diplomatic skills. I say that because the problems we have are political, they are not caused by ambiguity in the law. There are stakeholders who want registration data to be available to anyone as quickly and as easily as possible, and there are stakeholders who want it to be protected as much as possible, and various positions in between. The law overriding this process is fixed, it is not a “moving target.” What moves and introduces ambiguity are the compromises and coalitions that form in the attempt to reach agreement. I hope you understand the importance of your role, which is not to drive policy or take sides, but to fairly broker agreements and get results in this contentious environment.--Milton Mueller 23 Apr 2019, Georgia Institute of Technology, Internet Governance Project (emphasis added)
Milton Mueller, 23 Apr 2019 replying to Chris Disspain (Vice-Chair of the ICANN Board of Directors and Board liaison to the EPDP), re: European Commission comments on Phase 1 report:

Chris
There is no inconsistency between the two statements. I am struggling to understand why key members of ICANN’s board do not understand this. Purposes determine what data is collected and how it can be used by the controller. Disclosure to third parties with legitimate interests is not a purpose ICANN has in collecting and using registrant data, but disclosure is nevertheless something that can happen legally when certain conditions are met. When a credit card company collects PII about me, its purpose is to facilitate financial transactions, it is not to provide my name and address to the police. But legally, the police can request disclosure of that information from the credit card company under certain conditions set by law. What is so difficult to understand there?
In the statements below, the EC merely insists, correctly, upon distinguishing between ICANN’s purposes for collecting and using registrant data, and its reasons for disclosing it to third parties. This does not rule out all disclosure to third parties with legitimate interests.
During the EPDP deliberations, the same point was made repeatedly by public comments, and a majority of the EPDP members. The law is clear. Some in this debate are trying to erect a false dichotomy: either we have ICANN collecting and disclosing registrant data indiscriminately, as it did during the old Whois, or there is no disclosure to third parties at all. Do you really think this is the choice we have? [link and emphasis added]
Also replying to Chris Disspain, Volker Greimann 24 Apr 2019:
Hi Chris,
I am with Milton here as I felt that the statements in the [European Commission] letter were more than clear when it comes to disclosures to law enforcement and third parties.  The purposes of law enforcement and third parties are not purposes of ICANN and ICANN should stop trying to fit a square peg through the round hole of its own purposes.
Law enforcement has legal rights under which access to data processed for various other purposes may be requested, for example under Art. 6 I (c) GDPR. Similarly, third parties will need a legal basis for any and every access request and controllers must in their own responsibility carry out a balancing between the rights of the data subject affected in each case and the rights of the requester. 
When they note under "Next Steps" that law enforcement needs a timely and workable solution going forward to ensure the ability of LEAs to access the data legitimately, that does not invalidate the basic legal assumptions they make before that. On the contrary, it supports their view that a disclosure model for LEAs that is compliant with the legal requirements as well as stable, transparent and predictable is necessary. 
No one said this was going to be easy but there is no contradiction in the letter when it comes to its messages. 
EPDP Links EPDP wiki & mail list, Phase 1 Final Report (pdf), GNSO mail list & calendar. Link to legal questions and memos.

EPDP related notes:
  • 9th EDPD (European Data Protection Days) 20-22 May 2019, Berlin--euroforum.de.
  • Annual Privacy Forum 2019--ENISA, DG CONNECT, the University of Rome Tor Vergata and LUISS University are organizing the Annual Privacy Forum (APF) 2019 on 13-14 June 2019 in Rome.--enisa.europa.eu.
  • The most stringent privacy law in the U.S. goes into effect January 1, 2020--California Consumer Privacy Act: A Compliance Guide | Skadden.com: "the law applies to any company that has California customers or employees, not just those based in the state."

5) ICYMI Internet Domain News 
graphic "ICYMI Internet Domain News" ©2017 DomainMondo.com
Warning over Google Chrome browser--thetimes.co.uk: "... Google’s plans to encrypt Chrome will make it harder to block harmful material, including child-abuse images and terrorist propaganda. The new version will bypass most parental control systems and undermine the government’s attempts to stop under-18s viewing pornography ..."  See also Google Caves to the Intolerant Left, Betraying Its Own Ideals--dailysignal.com and "Former Mozilla exec: Google has sabotaged Firefox for years"--zdnet.com.

U.S. congressional leaders question Google's massive tracking database known as Sensorvault that allegedly contains precise consumer location information from hundreds of millions of devices.

Governments vs internet freedom--spiked-online.com: "British and Australian officials are killing off free speech online."

US House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D–CA) declares a ‘New Era’ of Internet Regulation; EU Threatens Same--reason.com.

US: Analyzing the Republican net neutrality bills--aei.org.

Sri Lanka’s ban on social media forces a question nobody wants to ask: What if a global media network is impossible?--theatlantic.com.

Austria is About to Outlaw Anonymous Internet Comments--technadu.com.

Russia's parliament votes to unplug internet from world--dw.com.

To Battle Russian Disinformation, Ukraine Mimics … Russia--justsecurity.org.

It’s U.S. vs. World as Big Tech Faces Specter of Limiting Speech Online--nytimes.com.

EU: Good Ends, Bad Means? The EU’s Struggle To Protect Copyright--cfr.org and What the EU’s copyright overhaul means — and what might change for big tech--niemanlab.orgSee also "New European Law Will Change the Internet"--voanews.com, and Europe looks to remold internet with new copyright rules--abcnews.go.com.

India Is Leading the World in Internet Shutdowns--slate.com.

India: after TikTok Ban, Internet Freedom Foundation recommends alternatives to App Bans in India.

Venezuela: 'Venezuelans Are Starving for Information' in a Country in Chaos--time.com.

Brazil: Brazilian Supreme Court Justice Censures Online News Outlets--Supreme Court Justice Moraes went further and later blocked Facebook, WhatsApp, Twitter and Instagram accounts of seven people who wrote negative comments about his decision--riotimesonline.com.

Russia isn’t the first country to protest Western control over global telecommunications--theconversation.com.

Pakistan's Internet Landscape 2018--bytesforall.pk (pdf)

6) Most Read this past week on DomainMondo.com: 
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-- John Poole, Editor  Domain Mondo 

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2019-03-03

News Review | GNSO Council EPDP Vote March 4, Phase 2 Next

graphic "News Review" ©2016 DomainMondo.com
Domain Mondo's weekly internet domain news review (NR 2019-03-03) with analysis and opinion: Features • 1) GNSO Council EPDP Vote March 4, Phase 2 Next,  2) ICANN64 March 9-14, and more, 3) The .COM Monopoly & ICANNand more, 4) ICYMI: Antitrust, Privacy, Internet Freedom, 5) Most Read.

UPDATES:
March 8, 2019, Reminder: Next EPDP Team meeting at ICANN64, Kobe, Japan, Saturday, 9 Mar 2019, 11:00-18:30 JST, (Friday 9:00 pm EST in US); agenda here, more info further below. Links for Adobe Connect and audio here. Slides here.

March 7, 2019: GNSO Council EPDP Vote Aftermath
  • WHOIS Reform, at Last--internetgovernance.org, by Milton Mueller (NCSG EPDP member): "Discussion of this issue has been distorted for years by ICANN’s propensity to cater to special interest groups (mainly trademark interests but also law enforcement agencies) who conflate their interest in getting access to Whois data with the actual purpose for collecting it. The temporary specification‘s discussion of Whois purpose was especially awful (See section 4, page 5). It is amazing how much progress was made having started from that baseline. The need to comply with GDPR, however, gave privacy advocates and the contracted parties a hammer with which to pound away illegitimate constructions of Whois purposes."
  • GNSO Council Meeting March 4, 2019, transcript (pdf) p. 16, Marie Pattullo, GNSO Councilor (BC), after voting "no" on the March 4th motions: "The EPDP’s work is incomplete. This is just Phase 1, and the report is a step backwards for BC members’ interests compared to the temp spec especially as the legitimate purposes for collecting and processing data in the report are insufficiently precise and don't include consumer protection, cyber clients, DNS abuse and IP protections."

March 4, 2019: GNSO Council approves the motions re: EPDP Final Report (Phase 1). The vote approving was unanimous in the Contracted Parties House (CPH) and split in the Non-Contracted Parties House (NCPH) with "No" votes from the Business Constituency (BC) and Intellectual Property Constituency (IPC). Planning for EPDP Phase 2 work was then discussed, excerpts from the presentation:
See also the "mind map" (pdf) prepared by ICANN staff.

1) GNSO Council Votes on EPDP Final Report March 4, EPDP Phase 2 Next
GNSO Council meeting March 4, 2019, 21:00 UTC (4:00 pm EST in U.S.). Agenda embed below.  Audio cast via browser or app. Transcripts and recordings on GNSO Calendar.
Agenda Item 3: COUNCIL VOTE - Adoption of the Final Report (pdf) on Expedited PDP on the Temporary Specification for gTLD Registration Data (45 minutes)
Agenda Item 4: COUNCIL DISCUSSION - Expedited PDP on the Temporary Specification for gTLD Registration Data - Phase 2 Work (45 minutes)
GNSO Council March 4 agenda (pdf) embed below:

Links: GNSO mail list, meeting documents and motions
EPDP Final Report voting threshold: Supermajority, ICANN Bylaws, Section 11.3(i)(xix): A "GNSO Supermajority" shall mean: (A) two-thirds (2/3) of the Council members of each House, or (B) three-fourths (3/4) of the Council members of one House and a majority of the Council members of the other House.
Next EPDP Team meeting: Saturday, 9 Mar 2019, 11:00-18:30 JST, (9:00 pm Friday EST in US) at ICANN64 in Kobe, Japan--agenda--"for Phase 2 planning, and a discussion on how to manage the coincident Implementation and Phase 2 efforts" according to an email from the EPDP leadership team.  Links for audio and Adobe Connect on the "EPDP Team meeting" link above. EPDP Linksmail list and wiki; EPDP Final Report (pdf); EPDP Charter (pdf); Bird & Bird legal memos; EPDP legal mail list, ICANN's controllership legal memo (pdf).

Rafik Dammak, EPDP Acting Chair
"The GNSO Council and the EPDP team leadership are currently working to develop a plan for addressing Phase 2 and we need to know if there will be changes to the composition of the group."--email from Rafik Dammak, March 1, 2019.
"... When I initially committed to join the group, my intention was to participate in the entirety of the ePDP but the Phase 1 commitment was extremely taxing so I’d like to get a little bit of an understanding of how the leadership group thinks the timing in Phase 2 will compare."--Matt Serlin
"Both Hadia and I plan to continue. That of course presumes we can come up with a REASONABLE work plan that will not kill us."--Alan Greenberg
"... I think many of us are in the situation which Matt describes.  Please, what is the timeline you anticipate?  Will there be face to face meetings, and if so is there a budget for travel?  Will we be keeping our independent counsel?  These are questions whose answers will  influence my decision."--Stephanie Perrin
Related--email from GNSO Chair Keith Drazek to GNSO Councilor (and EPDP member) Ayden Férdeline re: Draft - 2019 GNSO Council Strategic Planning Session Report:
"Hi Ayden, Thanks for your work on this. I have asked Steve to incorporate some of your stylistic edits and some additional language, but I don’t think we can include the commentary on the participation of other SO/AC members in the EPDP and suggestions that other groups are sending discredited and disruptive members to engage with the GNSO.  That’s not something we should include in our formal report on the SPS. Thanks, Keith" (emphasis added)
Search for New EPDP Chair: email Feb 28, 2019, from GNSO Chair Keith Drazek: "Following two Council leadership calls this week, we have finalized the attached Expression of Interest (EOI) [embed below] for the EPDP WG Phase 2 Chair. This will be posted tomorrow and the deadline for responses will be March 22. Our goal is to confirm the new Chair during our April 18 Council meeting. We wanted to be sure to get this posted as soon as possible and certainly in advance of Kobe. The substance of the EOI is the same as the version we used for Phase One. In the interim transition period, while we find a permanent Chair, Rafik [Dammak] will be Acting Chair." [link and emphasis added]

EOI for EPDP WG Phase 2 Chair (reformatted from the original for ease of reading):

EPDP Related: ICANN and GDPR – nowhere near compliance | edri.org 27 Feb 2019: "... while the [EPDP] Initial Report proposes a strong reliance on “legitimate purpose of the controller” as a legal basis for most of the data processing practices, it at no point shows that it has balanced those purposes with the interests of the data subjects. This lack of proportionality was an explicit concern of the WP29 opinion in 2003, and the Initial Report falls far short of the balancing tests as described in WP 29 Opinion 05/2014. Furthermore, the Initial Report doesn’t acknowledge the principle of data minimisation ..."
Editor's notebe sure to read the full thread--Ayden Férdeline (ferdeline.com) is a GNSO Councilor and EPDP member. He is a tech policy fellow with the Mozilla Foundation in Berlin, Germany.

See also
  • Ann Cairns, executive vice chairman of Mastercard, discussing the internet of things, digital identities, and data privacy regulation at the Mobile World Congress 2019, says Europe's approach to data protection will be adopted worldwide--CNBC International | YouTube.com.
  • Revealed: Facebook’s global lobbying against data privacy laws--Leaked Facebook memo describes company's lobbying efforts in 2012 and 2013 against a proposed European data directive which later became GDPR--theguardian.com.

2) Other ICANN News
graphic "ICANN | Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers"
 ICANN64 | Kobe
a. ICANN64 9-14 March 2019, Kobe, Japan: ICANN64 Schedule.
Date and time in Kobe, Japan:
Meeting resources:

b.  ICYMI this past week on Domain Mondo:
  • ICANN, New gTLDs, Trademarks, RPMs, & Website Content (video) with Rebecca Tushnet, Harvard Law School; Brian Winterfeldt, Winterfeldt IP Group; Mary Wong, ICANN; Becky Burr, ICANN Board & Neustar; Sarah Deutsch, ICANN Board; Kathy Kleiman, Center for Information Technology, Princeton University; Jeff Neuman, Com Laude/Valideus; Mitch Stoltz, EFF; Brian King, MarkMonitor; at a conference at the American University Washington College of Law, Washington, D.C., Feb. 25, 2019.

c. ICANN org publishes Charter on Government Engagement Approach--icann.org. See
draft charter (pdf).

d. ICANN CTO David Conrad to oversee IANA Services and Public Technical Identifiers (PTI)--icann.org.

e. 22 Feb 2019 Letter from Verisign (Patrick Kane) to ICANN (Cyrus Namazi) (pdf) embed below  re: Request for Thick WHOIS Consensus Policy Extension:

f. Cooperative Engagement Process (CEP) and Independent Review Process (IRP) Status Update 25 Feb 2019 (pdf) excerpts:
IRP proceeding: Afilias Domains No. 3 Limited re: new gTLD .WEB. IRP commenced on 26 November 2018; two panelists have been appointed; awaiting appointment of remaining panelist. No hearings are currently scheduled.
CEP proceedings:

g. ICANN & ITU--ICANN Submits Application to International Telecommunications Union (ITU) for ITU-D Sector membership.
Editor's note: Questions about this at @sgdickinson and CCWG-InternetGovernance.

h. ICANN org recommends gTLD registries and registrars to implement the February-2019 version of the gTLD RDAP profile in their RDAP service. Editor's note: the recommended RDAP profile is already out-of-date per EPDP Phase 1 Final Report. ICANN's gTLD registry operators and registrars are required to implement a RDAP service by 26 August 2019.

i. Public Note (pdf) concerning the case of the gTLD “.AMAZON”
 Brazilian Internet Steering Committee
To: ICANN Board of Directors and GAC re: ICANN Board Resolutions 2019.01.16.02 – 2019.01.16.04
"The Brazilian Internet Steering Committee – CGI.br, exercising the mandate conferred upon it by Decree no. 4.829/2003 ... Endorses the request made by the Brazilian government in its letter to the ICANN Board of Directors, dated February 21, 2019, 'to postpone a final decision on the .AMAZON application to ICANN 65, with a view to allow the eight Amazon countries and Amazon Inc. to find a mutually acceptable solution.'"

3) Names, Domains & Trademarks
graphic "Names, Domains & Trademarks" ©2017 DomainMondo.com
a. The .COM Monopoly & ICANN--breakingviews.com: "... ICANN could reject the price hikes. Then again, Verisign may offer to increase the nonprofit’s cut in exchange for agreeing to the increases. A public consultation should help keep both groups honest, but the risk remains that a sweetheart deal gets even sweeter."

b.  Tucows $TCX Q4 2018 Q&A Transcript (pdf), excerpt: "With respect to domain portfolio sales, our portfolio of domains that we hold for resale in the aftermarket is something that we consider tactical, not strategic, as an asset. The bulk portfolio sale in Q4 2018 was generated from our non-surname portfolio of names held."

c. Once You’ve Filed a UDRP, There May Be No Going Back--Lexology.com: "1. Do not file frivolous UDRP complaints ..."

4) ICYMI Internet Domain News 
graphic "ICYMI Internet Domain News" ©2017 DomainMondo.com
Antitrust Enforcement Needs to Evolve for the 21st Century--eff.org.

EFF Supporting California’s Privacy For All Bill, Which Puts People, Not Tech Companies, in Control of Personal Data--eff.org.

Authoritarian assault on Internet Freedom is on the move in Russia and India--editorial in the washingtonpost.com..

India presses on with internet regulations--Chinese-style censorship feared after government consults with tech giants--asia.nikkei.com.

Domain Mondo archive