Fwd: [ncsg-policy] My non-TM draft comments on DAG4

Wendy Seltzer wendy at SELTZER.COM
Wed Jul 21 17:00:56 CEST 2010


Yet more DAG4 comments: these cover some non-TM issues.  I'd welcome any 
thoughts.

--Wendy

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [ncsg-policy] My non-TM draft comments on DAG4
Date: Sun, 18 Jul 2010 12:00:06 -0400
To: NCSG-Policy <ncsg-policy at n4c.eu>

Please comment, criticize, supplement, etc.

Concerns with DAG4:

Decisions without appeal (Module 2 and general):
The currently described process includes three places where an applicant
or application can fail without opportunity for appeal or extended
review: the background check, string similarity, and DNS stability
tests.  This appears to be a missing procedural safeguard, depriving
applicants and ICANN of opportunity to correct errors.  The lack of
safety-valve of an appeal mechanism within the application process may
leave ICANN with greater litigation exposure.  I would recommend that in
every case, the applicant have an opportunity to request reconsideration
of an erroneous or adverse decision.

“Denial of service” via objections (Module 3):
The lack of standing restriction for “morality and public order”
objection opens applicants to the equivalent of a distributed denial of
service attack, whereby a well-funded opponent or astroturf group could
generate multiple complaints, delaying the application and taxing the
resources of the decision forum.  Along with the quick dismissal of
“frivolous or abusive” objections, the process should consider a means
of speedy dismissal of duplicative objections.

Board approval of registry agreements (Module 5):
While the Board is ultimately responsible for the decisions of the
corporation, I am concerned that the explicit requirement of Board
approval for each new registry agreement will add delay and uncertainty
to what should be made a routine process.  The Board is able to request
informational updates and to intervene against a harmful decision
without this procedural step.

Amendment Working Group composition (Registry Agreement 7.6(e)(iv)):
As all members of the wider GNSO community, particularly registrants,
may be directly affected by amendments to registry agreements, each GNSO
Stakeholder Groups should be guaranteed representation in the working
group convened to consider amendments; the addition of members beyond
registries should not be left to ICANN's discretion.

New WHOIS requirements (Spec. 4, 1.8):
The bracketed language proposes additional requirements for exposure of
WHOIS data.  The requirement would place unwarranted additional burdens
on registries and registrants without corresponding benefits to the
community at-large.  Further, bracketed text buried deep in DAG4 is not
the appropriate place to make WHOIS policy

Additional nits:
2.1.5 regarding use of registry data (p. 289 of redline) seems to have
changed in meaning to say that the registry can permit misuse, but isn't
required to allow it!


-- 
Wendy Seltzer -- wendy at seltzer.org
phone: +1.914.374.0613
Fellow, Silicon Flatirons Center at University of Colorado Law School
Fellow, Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University
http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/seltzer.html
http://www.chillingeffects.org/
https://www.torproject.org/


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