Process and substantive problems with new .biz/.info/.org contracts
To Whom It May Concern: I am writing to express my sincere disappointment with the porposed contracts for the .biz, .info, and .org registries currently posted for public comment. These agreements represent a further departure from ICANN's supposed bottom-up policy development process and remove significant protections currently granted to individual registrants. I make these comments in my personal capacity as an individual domain name registrant, incorporating my perspective as a long-time participant in the ICANN process and the current chair of the GNSO's Whois privacy task force. I have tried to summarize my concerns into two general categories, one relating to the process by which these agreements were developed and another relating to substantive concerns with the removal of price controls in the proposed contracts. (1) Problems with the process by which the contracts were created These contracts incorporate a number of the substantive policy changes that were introduced in the recent .com and .net contracts. Although it is perhaps "fair" to put these new TLDs on an equal playing field with the massive TLDs that VeriSign operates, doing so (and incorporating a new approach to pricing) completely disregards the ongoing policy development process that seeks to establish the key contractual terms for TLD operators. The ICANN community, working closely with ICANN staff, is attempting to address many of the issues defined in these contracts. For ICANN to simply ignore this policy work and encode a number of policy assumptions made by various members of the ICANN staff is a slap in the face to those participating in this policy development process. What is the point of participating in a policy development process if ICANN staff will make an end run around that process by rushing new contracts through bilateral negotiations before the PDP can be completed according to a timeline developed in close conjunction with other members of the ICANN staff? These contracts continue the disturbing trend of making these contractual assumptions permanent by granting registry operators presumptive renewal of their agreements, and allowing future agreements to incorporate faulty policy assumptions in their renewal process. Consequently, this lack of process effects not only these TLDs in the short term, but in all likelihood will set precedents for all future TLDs. As a result, it simply sweeps aside countless hours of community effort and further proves that ICANN is completely uninterested in a bottom-up approach to policy development. If this is truly the case, we should simply make it clear and stop wasting so many people's time. (2) Problems with removing pricing restrictions These contracts remove the price caps currently imposed on registries. There are several problems with this approach. First, and most importantly, these price caps act as an important protection for consumers who have developed significant brand equity in their existing domain names. Allowing a registry to raise the fee on a popular domain that has built a business around Internet traffic associated with a domain name allows the registry operator to rob the registrant of the equity that they have built in the name. It is possible that price caps are not as important for new registrations as they are for renewals, but at the very least all existing registrations should be protected by continuing price caps on renewals. Secondly, each of the registry operators affected by these agreements bid for the TLD they operate on a fixed price basis. ICANN should not allow them to retroactively change the price under which they were awarded the contract until the existing term of their contracts have run, at a minimum. Thirdly, registry operators that are allowed to charge the full market value of a domain name will suck the life (actually the revenue stream) out of the one successful arena of competition within the domain name space--domain name registrars. Until now, registrars have flourished by offering a variety of business models with different approaches to pricing. If registries are able to capture essentially all of the value of a domain name registration, registrars will be forced to race to the bottom in terms of both pricing, services and innovation in order to stay in business. It seems likely that we would see a rapid return to much higher domain name prices, fewer registrars, fewer domain names and substantially less innovation on the Internet. This change may be reasonable once true competition exists within the registry space. ICANN should not put the cart before the horse and enter into contracts that assume the presence of competition when it does not yet exist. Thanks for taking the time to consider these comments, Jordyn |