WHOIS: ICANN Sacrifices Privacy for Shot at Independence

Milton Mueller mueller at SYR.EDU
Wed Oct 11 16:06:56 CEST 2006


Robin:
Prof. Geist may be a bit behind the discussion on this topic. When the
JPA was released, on Sept. 30 both Board member Susan Crawford and the
Internet Governance Project issued strong criticisms of the Whois
provision in the new JPA. Moreover, a number of registry and registrars
on the Whois task force expressed the same concerns.

Based on this pressure, ICANN CEO Paul Twomey was forced to issue a
disclaimer October 4 about the Whois clause, saying that it only
requires ICANN to enforce the existing policy but does not prevent ICANN
from changing it. See the ICANNWatch article here:
http://www.icannwatch.org/article.pl?sid=06/10/04/2226203&mode=thread

Like M. Geist, we remain deeply concerned (thought NOT surprised) by the
fact that this highly prescriptive statement ever got into the JPA in
the first place, but it is going too far to say that ICANN cannot change
its policy or that the Whois Task Force's reforms cannot proceed.


>>> Robin Gross <robin at ipjustice.org> 10/10/06 1:41 PM >>>
Professor Geist has reviewed the recent agreement between the US
government and ICANN and found a clause requiring ICANN to make no
change on WHOIS policy.

Robin

http://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/1474/159/


      ICANN Sacrifices Privacy for Shot at Independence

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Tuesday October 10, 2006

Appeared in the Toronto Star on October 9, 2006 as Web's Naming Body
Barters Away Privacy <http://geisticannagreement.notlong.com>

Appeared in the BBC on October 10, 2006 as Internet Privacy 'Sacrificed"

By ICANN <http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/6036481.stm>

Internet governance has attracted increasing attention in recent years
as governments, business communities, and Internet users struggle to
develop a model that adequately takes into account the concerns of all
stakeholders. At the center of this debate is the Internet Corporation
for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), a California-based non-profit
corporation charged with the principal responsibility for maintaining
the Internet's domain name system.

ICANN has been dogged by criticism since it was established under
contract to the U.S. government in 1998. Those concerns have focused
primarily on poor accountability practices. The power retained by the
U.S. - the 1998 agreement gave it significant oversight powers - has
left many governments uncomfortable with their limited input into
Internet governance decisions, while the business community,
particularly companies involved in the multi-billion dollar domain name
registration sector, have become increasingly vocal about ICANN's lack
of transparency and due process mechanisms.

Meanwhile Internet users, who were initially promised a "bottoms-up"
policy making process with half of the seats on the ICANN board reserved

for their interests, have become steadily marginalized within the ICANN
community with no guaranteed board representation and with limited
support for policy initiatives.

Late last month, ICANN took a major step toward addressing some of these

concerns by signing a new agreement with the U.S. government entitled
the Joint Project Agreement. ICANN immediately heralded the JPA as a
"dramatic step forward" for full management of the Internet's domain
name system through a "multi-stakeholder model of consultation."

ICANN stated that the agreement grants it unprecedented independence by
removing many of the U.S. government's oversight controls. These include

the elimination of a twice-annual reporting requirement to the U.S.
Department of Commerce (ICANN will instead release a single annual
report targeted to the full Internet community) and a shift away from
the highly prescriptive policy responsibilities featured in the original

ICANN contract.

Moreover, with the JPA scheduled to expire in September 2009, ICANN
supporters believe that the stage is now set for formal privatization of

Internet governance responsibilities with the U.S. government ultimately

relinquishing any further oversight authority.

While the JPA may indeed represent an important change, a closer
examination of its terms suggest that there may be a hidden price tag
behind ICANN newfound path toward independence - the privacy of domain
name registrants.

For the past five years, privacy has lingered as one of ICANN's most
contentious policy issues. Information on tens of millions of domain
name registrants are contained in the "WHOIS database", which is readily

available to anyone with Internet access. Pre-dating ICANN, the database

identifies the name, address, and other personal information of domain
name registrants.

Privacy groups, including European data protection commissioners, have
expressed misgivings about the mandatory collection and the disclosure
of registrant personal information. They note that domain name
registrants are required to provide accurate registration information
(failure to do so may result in a loss of the domain name) and that the
open disclosure of this personal data may create a chilling effect on
the registration of controversial websites where the registrant desires
to remain anonymous. For example, registrants in oppressive political
regimes may need to hide their identity to avoid criminal prosecution,
while corporate whistleblowers in North America could lose their jobs if

their identities were discovered.

After years of debate, the ICANN community recently took baby steps
toward eliminating the mandatory disclosure of personal information
within the WHOIS database. The U.S. government strenuously objected to
the WHOIS reforms, arguing that law enforcement and intellectual
property interests rely on easy availability of such data. Yet with the
reforms, the data would be readily available to law enforcement, with
the appropriate due process measures (such as court orders). The issue
is whether the data should be available without any oversight.

Given that a newly independent ICANN might continue to pursue WHOIS
reform, the U.S. government included a specific provision on the issue
within the JPA. It mandates ICANN to "continue to enforce existing
policy relating to WHOIS, such existing policy requires that ICANN
implement measures to maintain timely, unrestricted and public access to

accurate and complete WHOIS information, including registrant,
technical, billing and administrative contact information."

The implications of this clause seem clear - the U.S. government has
undone five years of policy work that the Internet community has
undertaken by requiring ICANN to enforce current WHOIS policies. As
discontent over the WHOIS issue mounted late last week, ICANN CEO Paul
Twomey offered a strained interpretation of the clause, suggesting that
he did not believe that it restricted future WHOIS reforms.

A more realistic take is that ICANN and the U.S. government have once
again undermined the confidence of the Internet community and have
provided a clear signal that the U.S. government is still reluctant to
transfer its oversight authority. In its zeal to obtain independence, it

would appear that ICANN has bartered the privacy of millions of domain
name registrants around the world.

/Michael Geist holds the Canada Research Chair in Internet and
E-commerce Law at the University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law. He can
reached at mgeist at uottawa.ca or online at www.michaelgeist.ca./



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