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Re: [soac-mapo] Ideology vs. practicality in MAPO/MOPO

  • To: soac-mapo@xxxxxxxxx
  • Subject: Re: [soac-mapo] Ideology vs. practicality in MAPO/MOPO
  • From: Richard Tindal <richardtindal@xxxxxx>
  • Date: Sun, 11 Jul 2010 21:09:32 -0700

Antony

Let me play this back to make sure I have it.

You're saying there are no international laws/ treaties on this topic (I think 
that's a a statement of fact)  and that even when we talk about 'international 
norms' we're on shaky ground as such norms are not well defined or broadly 
accepted.

Given the above  - you're suggesting this issue is best handled by a broad 
based panel who would effectively vote on objectionable strings.   Purely as an 
example,  there might be 15 persons on a panel and if 10 or more of them found 
a string to be objectionable this string would be rejected  (or possibly go 
into another review process).    You're suggesting this sort of political 
approach is the most practical one - given the extreme subjectivity of the 
issue.

Is that it?

If so,  have you given thought to what standard the panel would apply?     
Would it be as broad as "I know it when I see it",   or do you foresee 
something more detailed like 'strings that are profoundly and inherently 
objectionable with no redeeming value".        What sort of standard do you 
think the panel should use?

RT


 
On Jul 11, 2010, at 10:38 AM, Antony Van Couvering wrote:

> 
> This note is meant to provide what I think is the background of this issue, 
> and to point the way forward as I see it. 
> 
> Both ICANN and the GAC have ideals (or ideologies), that conflict with the 
> realities.   Everything is fine as long as the realities are allowed to exist 
> in a parallel universe from the ideologies, and as long as the cognitive 
> dissonance created by the meeting of the two is infrequent or hidden. 
> 
> In a previous note, I mentioned that the issue with MAPO for the US 
> Government and other governments is that "morality and public order" is in 
> international treaties an *exception* process, not an affirmative global 
> definition.
> 
> So why not, you may ask, use the obvious solution, which is to use exactly 
> that exceptions process and build up a system whereby national governments 
> can "opt out" of TLDs they don't like?  I think we will get there, but we 
> have to deal with the problem that this PRACTICAL solution isn't easy to 
> square with the IDEOLOGICAL constraints that bind both ICANN and government 
> players. 
> 
> ICANN's ideology is that there is "one world, one Internet, everyone 
> connected."   While that's Rod Beckstrom's phrase, it's a fair encapsulation 
> of an ideal that motivates a lot of people in ICANN, including myself.   It's 
> also readily apparent that there are many exceptions to this ideal, which are 
> never mentioned -- they are the crazy cousins kept in the attic that nobody 
> talks about.  One example that should be useful for this discussion is the 
> widespread blocking of second-level domain names (and websites) by the 
> Chinese government; another would be the creation of pseudo-TLDs that exist 
> with a tenuous connection to the global root, or with no connection at all.  
> 
> So ICANN's ideology does not allow opt-out from global standards -- that way 
> lies chaos, this line of thinking goes -- even though there are already 
> plenty of exceptions and they Internet hasn't collapsed yet.   
> 
> The US Government has a few ideal/ideologies that it regularly flouts, 
> although the sophistry involved in explaining why is a great deal more 
> evolved and sophisticated than anything ICANN has come up with.  You will 
> note (as an example) that the US Gov't representative isn't taking a stand to 
> defend the first amendment right to freedom of speech.  In fairness, just as 
> there are no global standards of morality, neither does the US constitution 
> cover non-US citizens outside the US.  But still...
> 
> In reality, what the US government and many other governments want is a 
> choke-point to make sure nothing bad happens.  They don't know what that bad 
> thing might be (think Rumsfeld's "unknown unknowns"), but they do know that a 
> bad decision could have major implications for global communications policy 
> and diplomacy generally.  Right now, thanks to the Affirmation of 
> Commitments, the US has placated other governments who want to have a say in 
> DNS matters by changing its status from "we decide" to "first among equals" 
> -- or so it seems on paper.  But if the actions of ICANN lead to new TLDs 
> that are offensive to other countries, those countries are going to once 
> again challenge the hegemony of the US and its allies in DNS matters.  
> 
> So despite the "nice ideal" of free speech, what governments really want is a 
> way to provide adult -- i.e., government --  supervision to ICANN.  But they 
> can't say that without really causing a ruckus within ICANN.   That's why the 
> GAC refuses to come up with a plan of their own. 
> 
> The opt-out solution probably provides a PRACTICAL solution for both ICANN 
> and governments.  It does not, however, provide a PRINCIPLED approach that 
> either party could sign on to.  (The problem with the "distinguished 
> international jurist" approach embodied in the current MOPO proposal is that 
> these lawyers might come up with something that works in principle but is a 
> disaster from a practical standpoint.  From the governments' point of view, 
> the risk is too great.)
> 
> To me, the way forward is clear.  Suzanne Sene of the US Gov't even mentioned 
> it, as an aside.  It was an aside because the US government doesn't want to 
> be seen as promoting a particular solution.  Nonetheless, Suzanne is too good 
> at her job to start talking nonsense: this was an unofficial suggestion. 
> 
> "So I did look at the geographic names approach, where there is a
> proposal for a geographic names panel that will review all the strings
> to see if they fall under that category, and started to try to think
> out loud, I don't know if we might want to pursue this.  You know,
> could you develop an approach for string review that might minimize
> the potential that the new gTLD process would be overwhelmed with
> possibly intractable disputes over sensitive strings that fall into
> certain categories."
> 
> From where I sit, this is a good starting point.  A new panel, sufficiently 
> large to include diverse membership, would restore a political element to the 
> decision that would allow governments to exert pressure to prevent a "bad" 
> decision, but would shield them from being blamed from interfering.   
> Likewise, ICANN can claim that the "community" made the decision.  And if a 
> few governments still didn't like a TLD, well then, they could block it, just 
> as China blocks second-level domains today. 
> 
> I think that something like this is the only way to bring the ideals and the 
> practicalities together under one roof.  Is it ideal?  Certainly not.  Is it 
> practical?  Eminently.
> 
> Antony



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