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Opposition to Employ Media Request to Change sTLD Charter
- To: "'jobs-phased-allocation@xxxxxxxxx'" <jobs-phased-allocation@xxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: Opposition to Employ Media Request to Change sTLD Charter
- From: Jeffrey Casper <jcasper@xxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 15 Jul 2010 14:43:14 +0000
July 15, 2010
Peter Dengate Thrush, Chairman
Members of the Board of Directors
International Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers
Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers
4676 Admiralty Way, Suite 330
Marina del Rey, CA 90292-6601
USA
RE: Opposition to Employ Media Request to Change sTLD Charter
Dear Chairman Dengate Thrush and Members of the Board:
I am writing on behalf of the American Occupational Therapy Association's
OTJobLink.org to urge you to reject Employ Media's request for authority to
permit second level registration of strings that do not correspond to an
employer's name in the .jobs sponsored top level domain. The American
Occupational Therapy Association's OTJobLink.org, which would be directly and
adversely affected, opposes the unilateral expansion of the .jobs charter to
encompass regional and industry-specific second-level registrations.
Under the terms of ICANN's request for proposals for new sTLDs dated 15
December 2003 (the "sTLD RFP"), applicants - including Employ Media - were
required to demonstrate that the proposed sTLD addresses the needs and
interests of a clearly defined community (the Sponsored TLD Community). In
addition, applicants were required to demonstrate that the policy-formulation
procedures for the sTLD operate primarily in the interests of the Sponsored TLD
Community, and that the proposed sTLD enjoys broad based support of the
Sponsored TLD Community. [1]
In its application, Employ Media proposed to serve the needs of human resources
professionals responsible for human resources management in the corporate
setting, and pledged to maintain .jobs as "a name space for employers."[2] The
limited nature of the .jobs Sponsored Community is reflected by the applicant's
commitment to limit registrations to the legal name of an employer and/or a
name or abbreviation by which the employer is commonly known. According to the
sTLD Application, "due to restrictions set forth in this proposal, a
registration in the .jobs sTLD will be associated with an employer," [3] and
Employ Media committed to prohibit registration of occupational and industry,
and geographic identifiers." The bottom line is that as proposed by Employ
Media and approved by ICANN, the .jobs sTLD is intended to serve HR
professionals and recruiting firms representing direct employers only, in each
case by using the legal name of such employers as a registration at the second
level. That community does not include online employment services providers
like the American Occupational Therapy Association's OTJobLink.org, nor did
Employ Media demonstrate the support of online employment services providers in
connection with the .jobs sTLD Application.
Employ Media's current request for authority to permit the "registration, use,
and promotions of domains that are not the company names of the registrant"[5]
would fundamentally alter the Sponsored Community for the .jobs sTLD and
eliminate its pledge not to create second level registrations of regional and
industry-specific job boards. Employ Media did not attempt to demonstrate the
support of online employment services providers and their vendors, and in fact
went out of its way to avoid contacting job board operators about the proposed
expansion.[6] This is not surprising, given that Employ Media intends to add
second level registrations that will be confusingly similar to established job
boards.
As a material change to the .jobs Registry Agreement, this request must be
reviewed by the ICANN Board based on applicable criteria from the sTLD RFP.
Under those criteria, the request should be rejected as an attempt to "route
around" the sponsorship eligibility requirements in the sTLD RFP and the
protections built into the .jobs Registry Agreement to prevent "abusive
registration activities and other activities that affect the legal rights of
others."[7] Approval of the .jobs Phased Allocation Program would threaten the
integrity of the RSEP process and undermine the credibility of ICANN's
commitments in connection with the introduction of new top level domains in
general.
Sincerely,
Jeffrey A. Casper, CEM
Director, Sales & Corporate Relations
American Occupational Therapy Association
4720 Montgomery Lane
Bethesda, Md. 20814
301-652-6611 ext. 2715
800-877-1383 ext. 2715
301-656-3218 fax
Occupational Therapy: Living Life To Its Fullest.
P Please consider the environment, and only print this e-mail if necessary
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