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[gnso-dow123] Re: [council] Regarding Letter from American Intellectual Property Law Association
- To: <ross@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: [gnso-dow123] Re: [council] Regarding Letter from American Intellectual Property Law Association
- From: "Anthony Harris" <harris@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 22 Jun 2006 11:32:21 -0300
Ross,
On schedule as expected!
I would be very happy to introduce you to any number of operators that are
unconcerned about Formulation 1 as it relates to their core business.
Unfortunately, there aren't many (if any) of them that participate in
ICANN's policy development process, so they are relatively unheard in the
process. (On a slightly related not, it seems that the ISPCP website has
been taken offline by your provider and that many of the associations
counted as members are defunct. Presumably, this makes it extremely
difficult for interested parties to get involved with the ISPCP.)
The core business of operators can hardly revolve around what happens
to WHOIS, no one ever stated that. WHOIS information is but one
useful resource that we see no need to hide or do away with it. It is
comforting to see that you are vigilant over our website and it's contents.
There is work in progress going on there.
Moreover, I should also clarify that I am not pretending to speak for
these operators. Rather, I'm passing on my observation that based on the
conversations that I have almost daily with them about this and other
related operational issues, that they don't seem to share the views
espoused by those in the ISPC and other GNSO constituencies who opposed
Formulation 1.
OK they are entitled to have a different viewpoint, and so?
Yes, you are correct - this is my opinion. But please don't forget that my
opinions are mostly shaped by your position. If my interpretation of the
position of your constituency is incorrect, I welcome the opportunity to
learn more and form new opinions based on that. However, I'm not sure that
it is incorrect. The ISPC is quite clear that unfettered whois access must
be preserved in order to ensure that issues related to content can be
resolved by network operators. Of course, IP issues are only a subset of
content issues (which also includes phishing, DDOS attacks, etc.) but I'm
not sure that this changes my basic understanding or assertion.
This is a complete misrepresentation of fact. The ISPCP never refused
to consider alternatives to unfettered access to WHOIS data. The
subject of tiered access began to be discussed quite some time ago in
the TF (possibly you were not around at that time), and was put aside
for later work, we did not oppose tiered access as a concept.
Speaking of opinions, I believe that we both have them ;) To the point, I
was once asked what I thought might be the best way to deal with the Whois
policy issue and I made the mistake of half-seriously replying that
personally, I thought the easiest solution to the policy problem was to
turn it off entirely. For very understandable reasons, you - and others -
continue to quote this out of context. It has never been the formal policy
position of Tucows or the Registrar constituency that Whois should be
eliminated - it is of tremendous value to my company, my customers and the
registrars I represent. The cost issue that we are seeking to avoid has
nothing to do with the status quo solution (which truth be told is a
non-material element in terms of our annual operating budget). It is a
reaction to Tiered Access "solution" that some continue to advocate for.
The technical solutions proposed are not practical, nor affordable. This
was the main motivation behind the oPOC proposal that our constituency
tabled, going back as far as the Mar del Plata meeting. We believe that by
rationalizing the level of data presented in Whois and building in
additional accountabilities, that a new focus on contactability can be
built into Whois that provides a broad range of users with a "best
possible compromise" solution. If this approach is too "aggressive" for
you, I sincerely apologize.
I fail to see how highlighting a rather evident fact is equivalent to
speaking
out of context, it rather helps to see what we are talking about in the
midst
of all the noise...I did not know you said this, but thanks for the
confirmation!
Your actions speak for themselves, my opinion is unimportant. The OPOC
solution is a pretty lame suggestion, fully in context with the Formulation
1
which you successfully voted through. And thanks for confirming the
'technical solutions proposed are not practical, nor affordable' with
regards
to tiered access. And by the way it is not that particular approach that is
'too
agressive', but your continuous vehemence and intolerance which at least I
find unacceptable.
I'm not sure that there is anything cooperative about the current task
force or the GNSO's policy development process. Your comments, and most of
those made in opposition to Formulation 1, perfectly illustrate the
problem. Instead of assessing the needs of the other stakeholders as it
relates to the needs of your constituency and identifying where compromise
might possibly be had, the representatives of the ISPC, BCUC and IPC have
instead focused on advocating a single, immutable position. This advocacy
consumes most of the time available to the task force and is the primary
reason why little progress has been made on this issue.
You are quite right, there is nothing cooperative about the current TF or
the
GNSO's policy development process. I would simply reply that you have
described, in utter perfection, the attitudes you express in your frequent
interventions, and your total unwillingness to accept disagreement with your
positions. If little progress has been made, I would not deny you your
ample share of the credit.
It is not by accident or because of weighted voting that Formulation 1
received support necessary within the task force and at Council. The sole
reason that this proposition was successful was because it represents the
best middle ground that many parties with differing goals and needs could
find. This middle ground was only found because these parties, the
registries, noncommercials, nominating committee reps and registrars,
actually talked to one another and worked through their respective
differences until a consensus view was found. I believe an effort was made
on several occassions to include the rest of the constituencies in this
dialog, but the outreach never bore fruit.
It is a falsity that outreach was made to, at least, our constituency.
In fact, as you may recall in Luxembourg I attempted this, and was
rewarded later with a document containing......the OPOC !
I keep bringing this up in our calls, and I apologize if it has become
boring for you, but we need alternatives and suggestions for compromise
from your constituency and those of the IPC and BC - not advocacy. Without
it, this criminal lack of progress will continue.
It has nothing to do with boredom, and as far as advocacy.....
Tony Harris
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ross Rader" <ross@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Anthony Harris" <harris@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: "Council GNSO" <council@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>; <gnso-dow123@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, June 21, 2006 7:43 PM
Subject: Re: [council] Regarding Letter from American Intellectual Property
Law Association
Anthony Harris wrote:
Ross,
I think you have a valid point when you say:
"it would extremely helpful if stakeholders limited
themselves to speaking for themselves."
And thus am rather surprised at your conclusion that:
"The definition also seems to meet the needs
of web host and ISP operators,"
If it does, I have yet to meet one...
I would be very happy to introduce you to any number of operators that are
unconcerned about Formulation 1 as it relates to their core business.
Unfortunately, there aren't many (if any) of them that participate in
ICANN's policy development process, so they are relatively unheard in the
process. (On a slightly related not, it seems that the ISPCP website has
been taken offline by your provider and that many of the associations
counted as members are defunct. Presumably, this makes it extremely
difficult for interested parties to get involved with the ISPCP.)
Moreover, I should also clarify that I am not pretending to speak for
these operators. Rather, I'm passing on my observation that based on the
conversations that I have almost daily with them about this and other
related operational issues, that they don't seem to share the views
espoused by those in the ISPC and other GNSO constituencies who opposed
Formulation 1.
As to your remark:
"(and other related parties such as those that place a
higher relative value on intellectual property considerations than they
do on privacy, convenience and cost considerations such as the GNSO's
BCUC and ISPC.)"
This is your opinion. Not necessarily a fact.
Yes, you are correct - this is my opinion. But please don't forget that my
opinions are mostly shaped by your position. If my interpretation of the
position of your constituency is incorrect, I welcome the opportunity to
learn more and form new opinions based on that. However, I'm not sure that
it is incorrect. The ISPC is quite clear that unfettered whois access must
be preserved in order to ensure that issues related to content can be
resolved by network operators. Of course, IP issues are only a subset of
content issues (which also includes phishing, DDOS attacks, etc.) but I'm
not sure that this changes my basic understanding or assertion.
Nonetheless, I beleive it an opportune occasion to point out that you
have neglected to declare a pretty obvious fact, and that is that the
whole content of this very prolongued (and in your personal
case, very agressive) discussion, seeks to eliminate WHOIS
entirely and rid you of the cost and trouble of providing it.
Speaking of opinions, I believe that we both have them ;) To the point, I
was once asked what I thought might be the best way to deal with the Whois
policy issue and I made the mistake of half-seriously replying that
personally, I thought the easiest solution to the policy problem was to
turn it off entirely. For very understandable reasons, you - and others -
continue to quote this out of context. It has never been the formal policy
position of Tucows or the Registrar constituency that Whois should be
eliminated - it is of tremendous value to my company, my customers and the
registrars I represent. The cost issue that we are seeking to avoid has
nothing to do with the status quo solution (which truth be told is a
non-material element in terms of our annual operating budget). It is a
reaction to Tiered Access "solution" that some continue to advocate for.
The technical solutions proposed are not practical, nor affordable. This
was the main motivation behind the oPOC proposal that our constituency
tabled, going back as far as the Mar del Plata meeting. We believe that by
rationalizing the level of data presented in Whois and building in
additional accountabilities, that a new focus on contactability can be
built into Whois that provides a broad range of users with a "best
possible compromise" solution. If this approach is too "aggressive" for
you, I sincerely apologize.
The task force is a vehicle to do this piece by piece, since
you have the weighted voting advantage when it comes to that.
This is something I can understand, and I am sure there must
be a suitable solution for it, that can be discussed in a civil,
cooperative atmosphere, without insulting our intelligence in
the process.
I'm not sure that there is anything cooperative about the current task
force or the GNSO's policy development process. Your comments, and most of
those made in opposition to Formulation 1, perfectly illustrate the
problem. Instead of assessing the needs of the other stakeholders as it
relates to the needs of your constituency and identifying where compromise
might possibly be had, the representatives of the ISPC, BCUC and IPC have
instead focused on advocating a single, immutable position. This advocacy
consumes most of the time available to the task force and is the primary
reason why little progress has been made on this issue.
It is not by accident or because of weighted voting that Formulation 1
received support necessary within the task force and at Council. The sole
reason that this proposition was successful was because it represents the
best middle ground that many parties with differing goals and needs could
find. This middle ground was only found because these parties, the
registries, noncommercials, nominating committee reps and registrars,
actually talked to one another and worked through their respective
differences until a consensus view was found. I believe an effort was made
on several occassions to include the rest of the constituencies in this
dialog, but the outreach never bore fruit.
I keep bringing this up in our calls, and I apologize if it has become
boring for you, but we need alternatives and suggestions for compromise
from your constituency and those of the IPC and BC - not advocacy. Without
it, this criminal lack of progress will continue.
If you are seriously interested in making progress, then please reconsider
the request I made of you and Marilyn on the last call: how can the
existing proposals that have been tabled be changed so that they are
suitable for the needs of the stakeholders you represent?
Regards,
--
-rr
"Don't be too timid and squeamish about your actions.
All life is an experiment.
The more experiments you make the better."
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
Contact Info:
Ross Rader
Director, Research & Innovation
Tucows Inc.
t. 416.538.5492
c. 416.828.8783
Get Started: http://start.tucows.com
My Blogware: http://www.byte.org
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