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Dear Mary, Konstantinos and All,<br>
I understand Mary's point about not polarizing sides, but I think we
can celebrate when NCUC <br>
voices and concerns are heard. In Sydney, in New York City, in London,
in Hong Kong,<br>
in meetings in Washington DC and Beijing, NCUC members, as NCUC and in
their personal capacities<br>
raised issues, concerns, and alternatives. In doing do, we discussed,
debated, negotiated within NCUC,<br>
with ALAC, with Registries, with Registrars, with outstanding
Registrant attorneys, with Senior ICANN staff, <br>
and even with members of the IRT Committee. <br>
<br>
We worked hard to bring many different parties and views to table --
and when the ICANN Community <br>
listens, that is a cause for celebration. It is a "win" for the
process, a "win" for ICANN, and a "win"<br>
for community input (a key pillar of ICANN). Basically, it is good --
but much more work ahead!<br>
So volunteer and stay tuned. <br>
<br>
I look forward to hearing from Mary what is passed down to the GNSO
Council <br>
for review, and when things are due.<br>
<br>
Best, <br>
Kathy<br>
<br>
<br>
<blockquote cite="mid:C6E17AA1.9FFC%25k.komaitis@strath.ac.uk"
type="cite">
<pre wrap="">Thanks Kathy for this update, it is really helpful. Unfortunately I was not
able to be in Washington (although I would have loved to) but I have heard
the transcripts of the testimonies.
Kathy is correct, we have won a big fight here. The fact that the most
dangerous piece of the IRT - the GPML - looks like its going, is a big
victory. The other two things will go to the GNSO and that is something we
need to take advantage of. we have the ideas in place as well as innovative
solutions - we really do have, what I believe is a very good argument with
both the URS and the Clearinghouse.
Trademark owners at this stage keep on repeating the same argument, while we
come forward with novel and balanced solutions. Richard Heath's testimony at
least is a repetition of the IRT arguments - in our meeting back in August,
we managed to make Brent and Doug see that many of the IRT's arguments
(repeated by INTA) do not fall within the remit of intellectual property
much less trademark law.
So, I think, Seoul will be a good chance for all of us to repeat the success
of Sydney. Much more work is needed but we have what I believe is the
groundwork - and this is great.
Best
KK
On 24/09/2009 15:36, "Kathy Kleiman" <a class="moz-txt-link-rfc2396E" href="mailto:Kathy@KathyKleiman.com"><Kathy@KathyKleiman.com></a> wrote:
</pre>
<blockquote type="cite">
<pre wrap="">Hi All,
I wanted to share a few thoughts on the hearing held by Congress on New
gTLDs yesterday. Since I live here in Washington DC, I was able to hop
the Metro and go down to see it. It was called: Hearing on ³The
Expansion of Top Level Domains and its Effects on Competition.²
There were 4 witnesses who testified: Doug Brent for ICANN, Paul Stahura
for eNom, Richard Heath for International Trademark Assoc., and Steve
DelBianco for NetChoice (a organization of Verisign and others). So, 2
for new gTLDs (ICANN/eNom) and two against them (INTA/Netchoice--
although NetChoice wants IDNs to move forward).
Basically, the premise was that ICANN is not doing enough to protect big
trademark owners, and who needs new gTLDs anyway?
Doug Brent properly said that expansion of the root has been part of
ICANN's mission since the beginning. New gTLDs will help registrant
choice, competition generally, and serve the rest of the world with
IDNs. He said ICANN has had at least 3 studies on the New gTLD program,
and that the additional studies being called for may or may not be
needed; ICANN is looking into it. But he said, rightly, that at some
point the studies have to stop and work to go forward.
Brent also said that the policies and procedures for the new gTLDs have
been in development at ICANN for years and came up through the GNSO
process, with ICANN community involvement. He said that the process has
worked.
Richard Heath, from the International Trademark Association and the UK,
said that new gTLDs are: linked to increased crime, threaten health and
safety, tarnish existing trademarks, and are only being done to get the
money from defensive registrations. (Wow!)
Paul Stahura from eNom wants new gTLDs. He said that there is consumer
demand for new gTLDs, new gTLDs will create competition in price,
service, and offerings, and that is definitely time for ICANN to move
forward. He also noted later that to roll out IDNs without rolling out
new gTLDs in English would be unfair to have a .BLOG in Chinese and
not in English, he argued, would be unfair to eNom and others.
Steve DelBianco was interesting. He is a smooth Washington person and
obviously has testified many times. He represents NetChoice, a group
which includes VeriSign, and he said that no new gTLDs are needed except
IDNs. ³With almost 200 million registered domains today, it is hard to
see how choice is constrained in any meaningful way...² He said ICANN
should enable IDNs before expanding Latin gTLDs-- but only IDNs for
³country-code domains controlled by governments.²
One great piece of news that came out is that the work we (NCUC) did
over the summer is definitely helping shape the debate. As you know,
Konstantinos and I in Washington DC and Leslie in China had long
detailed meetings with ICANN staff in August, and made strong and
well-researched recommendations. Our great work in Sydney by all who
attended and went up to the microphones to protest the IRT Report- was
important too!
According to Doug's testimony yesterday, ICANN will be sending the IP
Clearinghouse and URS (UDRP replacement) to the GNSO for review! The
Globally Protected Marks List appears to be gone completely! This is
very good news... and an important future piece of work that we (NCUC)
should start working on right away.
That's the scoop from DC.
Best,
Kathy (Kleiman)
p.s. Sorry to miss the NCUC held at the same time!
</pre>
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