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RE: [gnso-vi-feb10] SRSU
- To: "Rosette, Kristina" <krosette@xxxxxxx>, "Gnso-vi-feb10@xxxxxxxxx" <Gnso-vi-feb10@xxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: RE: [gnso-vi-feb10] SRSU
- From: Milton L Mueller <mueller@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 8 Jul 2010 00:43:14 -0400
Your position on SRSU and SRMU, seems quite close to that of NCSG
representatives. It would be good if the user house stood together on this.
I hope our WG chairs are taking note of this and making that closeness of
position part of the report
The only objection I have to what you have said below is that you are "fine
with fees paid to ICANN for 2nd level names" in SRSUs. I am not fine with such
fees for a SRSU, I think they are unjustifiable. Could you elaborate on why you
don't mind them?
--MM
From: owner-gnso-vi-feb10@xxxxxxxxx [mailto:owner-gnso-vi-feb10@xxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Rosette, Kristina
Sent: Thursday, July 08, 2010 12:01 AM
To: Gnso-vi-feb10@xxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: [gnso-vi-feb10] SRSU
Agree that, for SRSU, registry is only registrant and second level names can't
be sold. If registry wishes to assign third-level names, it should be able to
do so. Don't necessarily agree with limit on number of names - depends on the
number. Fine with fees paid to ICANN for second-level names. Agree that TLD
should be non-transferable. However, ICANN continues to reserve to itself the
discretion to re-delegate all TLDs (notwithstanding the numerous objections
raised in public comments by trademark owners, et al.)
Agree about ramifications of SRSU failure to comply.
For convenience, I list below the additional requirements the IPC proposed:
(a) The trademark to which the .brand is an identical match must be the subject
of trademark registrations of national effect in at least three countries in
each of at least three of the five ICANN regions.
(b) For first-round applicants, the registrations of national effect referenced
in (a) above must have issued on before June 27, 2008.
(c) The .brand exemption is inapplicable to trademark owners whose principal
business is the operation of a domain name registry, domain name registrar, or
domain name reseller.
(d) The relationship between the .brand TLD and its customer/Registered Name
Holder is defined by terms of service that encompasses a registration agreement
and governs content, the bundling of services or the purchase of a product;
membership in an organization or cooperative; maintenance of the terms of a
contract, trademark license; or an appropriate combination of these factors.
(e) Second-level .brand domain name registrations in models 2 and 3 are held in
trust by the TLD operator and are not delegated to a third-party user
(f) Second-level .brand domain name registrations in model 3 are delegated to
the user, but under the quality control provisions of a trademark license
agreement that allows the registry to terminate the registration at will
(g) Mixed-use gTLDs, where some names are held by the registry and other names
registered to external parties are not exempt from CO/VI regulations.
________________________________
From: owner-gnso-vi-feb10@xxxxxxxxx [mailto:owner-gnso-vi-feb10@xxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of jarkko.ruuska@xxxxxxxxx
Sent: Friday, July 02, 2010 3:53 AM
To: roberto@xxxxxxxxx; Gnso-vi-feb10@xxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [gnso-vi-feb10] SRSU
Dear all,
I have always been a supporter of the SRSU model in its simplest form and I
still find it very easy to define.
With the risk of repeating myself all over again I offer you my view of the
circumstances.
1) No name selling to third parties, registry is the only registrant and
controls the names completely.
Example: To replace brand.com with .brand TLD
2) TLD is non-transferrable (if the business dies, TLD is taken down in a
controlled fashion)
3) There could be a limit to number of names if that makes it more
acceptable to some, but my sense is that it doesn't really matter as the names
are private anyway
4) I could even live with normal fees attached to every name SRSU TLD
registers
If an SRSU TLD fails to comply with any of the above:
1) An amendment to registry agreement would have to be negotiated with ICANN
2) Normal VI rules would start to apply
For those of you that think that closed TLDs won't promote open innovation in
internet I have a couple of positive implications.
1) Full Vertical integration doesn't risk consumer protection because no
names are sold
2) Consumers could have tangible benefits with .brand TLDs.
Example: a brand could educate that all their legimite web pages end with
.brand. This would work extremely well with an entity like Red Cross, which is
struggling with all the scam donation sites every time there's a major
catastrophy. Internet users would know that it is genuine Red Cross site, if
the name ends with .redcross.
BR,
-jr
On 1.7.2010 21.39, "ext Roberto Gaetano" <roberto@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
The theme is the following:
Under which circumstances would people feel safe in allowing vertical
integration for a TLD that has a single registry and a single user (the typical
case being a "brand" TLD, for internal use only)?
Let me start.
* There should not be "sales" of SLDs, the names under the TLD are
distributed internally based on declared criteria.
* There is no "secondary market", i.e. a name cannot be "passed" to another
beneficiary. Actually, the name remains always under full control of the
registry.
The point is that if a registry does fulfill these requirements, they will be
granted an exception, and will be allowed to operate without giving equal
access to all registrars.
There might be interesting questions, like:
* Will they be allowed to use the services of one registrar, selected by
them, or not?
Cheers,
Roberto
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