NCSG Responses to Accountability & Transparency Review Team Questions

Mary Wong MWong at PIERCELAW.EDU
Mon Jun 14 15:43:39 CEST 2010


Even if everyone had access to the wiki, I think there is one more reason why having thoughtful and detailed responses like what Avri had provided sent to the listserv is useful. For those members who don't have the bandwidth to do more than perhaps glance through emails sent directly to their inboxes, especially if they haven't been as deeply involved in the intricacies of ICANN politics and process as some of the rest of us, I think reading through comments like Avri's provides valuable insight and background into why this kind of review exercise is important to NCSG.
 
Cheers
Mary
 
Mary W S Wong
Professor of Law & Chair, Graduate IP Programs
Franklin Pierce Law Center
Two White Street
Concord, NH 03301
USA
Email: mwong at piercelaw.edu
Phone: 1-603-513-5143
Webpage: http://www.piercelaw.edu/marywong/index.php
Selected writings available on the Social Science Research Network (SSRN) at: http://ssrn.com/author=437584


>>> 


From: Avri Doria <avri at LTU.SE>
To:<NCSG-NCUC-DISCUSS at listserv.syr.edu>
Date: 6/14/2010 9:35 AM
Subject: Re: NCSG Responses to Accountability & Transparency Review Team Questions
ps.  

yes, i have access to the wiki.  but i thought that me adding mine when others could not add theres was a really bad idea.

now if someone wants to take responsibility (not me)  for adding people's comments in line to the wiki if they don't have access then i will add mine to the wiki.

a.

On 14 Jun 2010, at 09:31, Avri Doria wrote:

> hi,
> 
> i thought of that.
> 
> but as i had said previously when Bill asked , not everyone has access to the wiki. and i do not plan to give everyone access to this particular wiki as it is meant to be an informational wiki for use by the various committees etc.  plus adding everyone to it would be a lot of work and people already have access to the ning.
> 
> that is why i suggested that if you wanted everyone to comment on line you use  ning where everyone does have access.  and then i heard that you had some better solution in mind so i got out of the way.
> 
> once i notice you put it on the wiki i said very few had access to, i figured you had decided on a different approach.
> 
> a.
> 
> 
> On 14 Jun 2010, at 08:38, Rafik Dammak wrote:
> 
>> Thanks Avri, but the idea was that people comment each question in the wiki and then making it easy for tacking responses and reading other contributions. I thought that you wanted to encourage people to use wiki (:
>> 
>> so every NCSG member who want to answer the question can login to the link sent by Bill, he/she will find the 11 questions which redirect to specific page. then he/she can comment there and see other answers.
>> 
>> 
>> Rafik
>> 
>> 2010/6/14 Avri Doria <avri at ltu.se>
>> hi,
>> 
>> As promised during the Open policy review phone call.  My initial answers to the questions.
>> 
>> On 12 Jun 2010, at 05:10, William Drake wrote:
>> 
>>> Hello again,
>>> 
>>> After playing with different options, Rafik and I decided to put the ATRT questions on the Social Text site.  He's posted them at https://st.icann.org/ncsg-ec/index.cgi?atrt_questionaire.   Any and all member responses to whichever questions you feel like addressing would be very helpful.
>>> 
>> 
>> 1.  The ICANN Policy 'Support' Staff has operated in a very non accountable way in all of its dealing with the Board on "behalf' of the rest of the volunteer community.  Instead of serving as a reliable broker, it has a well established practice of send secret reports to the Board on policy and on SO and AC affairs.  On a few occasions when those reports have become known, they proved to contain falsehoods.  It is impossible to know whether the falsehoods are due to errors or strategy, but they were nevertheless false.  And whether the false statements were accidental or intentional, the community never has a chance to review what is written or to respond.
>> 
>> The community has frequently asked for these secret reports to made public - especially those that pertain to the activities and decision making of the SOs and ACs, with the understanding that there are occasionally issues that need to be private, but the Policy 'Support' Staff has mostly not responded to the requests let alone opened itself up to scrutiny and accountability.  It is impossible to know how many board decisions were based on faulty information and all private memos from the last year's must to be made public and open to public scrutiny if ICANN is ever to be considered an accountable and transparent institution.
>> 
>> 2.  The Ombudsman is not a viable option.  Perhaps in theory it is, but an Ombudsman is supposed to be someone who is outside the organization and who is guaranteed neutral.  We have an Ombudsman who has been involved in the organization longer than many of the volunteers and is an integral part of the staff and pals around with them and the Board.  This is not, in any way, a viable accountability mechanism.  In order to become a viable accountability mechanism, it would be necessary to replace an Ombudsman every 2 or 3 years, and would be necessary for the person picked to remain separate from the Staff and the volunteers.
>> 
>> 3. For the most part, the decision making that goes on in the SOs seems transparent - certainly more so than most other organizations.  However, due to the black hole that exits between SO recommendations, secret staff reports and recommendations, and secret Board deliberations, most of the transparency is lost.  Staff reports should be publicly vetted and Board deliberations should be audiocast and recorded - in the same way laudable way that the A&T RT is doing.
>> 
>> 4.  ICANN's primary focus is still primarily focused on supporting those who can make money on GTLDs and on assuaging the anger of a few governments and not on the global Public Interest.    For example, there is still a great imbalance 3:1 in the GNSO between those who represent business and those who represent the Non commercial interests.
>> 
>> In terms of an event, I believe that the preference that the ICANN staff clearly gave to getting out IDN ccTLDs over IDN gTLDs, including reports (again always difficult to report without revealing sources from with the ICANN blanket of secrecy) that there was a guarantee that the IDN ccTLDs would be in the root 6 months before any new gTLD were allowed in the root.  The clear way in which the staff hustled to overcome the IDN ccTLD issue while languishing through the creation of the so-called Overriding Issues to slow down the new gTLD process was a way to meet international pressure from governments at the cost of competition and freedom in the creation of IDN gTLD by the same populations who are not receiving the IDN ccTLDs.
>> 
>> I hope that the Review Team has the ability to dig into any and all email archives and to question staff members (past and present) under guarantees of personnel immunity on events that occurred over the past years in managing to push the fasttrack , which started long after the new gTLD policy, at least 6 months ahead of new gTLDs
>> 
>> Because they are allowed to act secretly in these as well as other respects, it is impossible to know exactly what they are doing.  In addition to eliminating the ability of the Staff to work in secret, there should be whistle blower programs and protections to encourage those staff members who see problems to report them publicly without fear or retribution.
>> 
>> 5.  I believe it is really remiss that the Board is responsible for evaluating its own performance as opposed to having a committee that includes members of the SO and ACs do the evaluation.
>> 
>> An appeals mechanism is most definitely necessary, and various recommendations for such an appeals mechanisms were made the during the review before the MOU was replaced by the AOC.  While the AOC Review mechanisms are a start they are not sufficient.
>> 
>> 6. The GAC is only one of two ACs in a position to review the performance of the public interest.  The ALAC should have equal consideration in that effort.   I believe the by-laws requirement that the GAC give non-binding advice and that there be a policy for responding and deliberating that advice is a good rule that should be extended to the ALAC.  I also believe that this needs to be done in an open and transparent way.  I believe that some of the tendency these day to regard GAC principles as addenda to the by-laws is misplaced and a serious error.  The role of the GAC and ALAC is not oversight, but advice of the full scope of ICANN issues.
>> 
>> 7.  The reviews of GAC and ALAC issues need to be deliberate and specific, with the discussions open to the community and the results clearly and adequately published for reference.  The most important improvement that need to be made is to give ALAC the same non binding consideration that the GAC has in terms of advice that is listened to, understood, deliberated, and responded to.
>> 
>> 8.  While comment response is improving, it is not good enough yet.  All comments should be reviewed and responded to in writing.  Not all comments require or merit a change in the process, policy or document under review, but all need to be reviewed and understood with the responses clearly documented.  In some cases this has started happening and that is good.  In other cases this has not happened either because the staff was said to not have the resources or because the volunteers did not feel the comments merited a response.  This is an area where further improvement is required.
>> 
>> 9. The current rush to create a central a DNS Cert authority with invitation only meetings and staff declarations that this is an operational  issue and not a policy issue is the latest event of that nature.   By and large most ICANN 'operational' decisions are never fully explained and never opened to review and response by the ICANN volunteer community unless the community raises a fuss.  This is an area where great improvement is required.
>> 
>> 10. I believe the recent ICANN staff decision to reserve Geographical names in way contrary to the policy recommendation of the GNSO that had been approved by the Board is one such instance where the decision was neither embraced, supported or accepted.
>> 
>> 11. I think the policy development process is improving in this regard with more diverse working groups and earlier discussion of issues.  The secrecy at the top, however, where the policy recommendations can be obviated though various means (including secret misinformation) remains a serious problem, and a way in which the improvements can be negated.
>> 
> 



Pierce Law | University of New Hampshire - An Innovative Partnership
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