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[alac] ICANN ALAC comments on proposed new registry contracts

  • To: "Vinton G. Cerf" <vint@xxxxxxxxxx>, Paul Twomey <twomey@xxxxxxxxx>
  • Subject: [alac] ICANN ALAC comments on proposed new registry contracts
  • From: John L <johnl@xxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 6 Sep 2006 17:42:46 -0400 (EDT)

Hi. Two weeks ago the ICANN ALAC promised more comprehensive comments on the three proposed registry contracts in time for tomorrow's board meeting, and here they are. We haven't had time to get formal signoff due to limited time and the problems you know all too well of people in different time zones on every continent, but every member who has responded said he or she is in agreement, and I believe this fairly represents the consensus of the ALAC.

We've tried to keep it short, but if you want a one sentence summary: this is the wrong time to change registry contracts, so please don't.

Regards,
John Levine, johnl@xxxxxxxx, Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies",
for the ALAC

-------
At Large Advisory Committee comments on the proposed new contracts
for .ORG, .BIZ, and .INFO.

The At Large Advisory Committee views the proposed contracts with
great concern, and believes that several of the proposed changes will
have a severe negative effect on the At Large community.  We urge the
Board to make no changes to any of these contracts at this time.

1.  The .ORG contract has three years to run.  There is no need to
change it now.  The other two contracts are not in any immediate
danger of expiring, either, so the rush to revise them is baffling and
contrary to ICANN's principles of stability and transparency.

2.  We are particularly concerned that the rush to approve new
contracts gives the appearance that ICANN is attempting to subvert the
GNSO's policy development process.  Contracts that expire before the
GNSO has completed its current policy development process on registry
contractual conditions should be renewed on the same terms as in the
expiring contract, subject to revision to conform with adopted policy
recommendations.

3.  Once a user has selected a domain, that domain's registry is the
monopoly supplier of renewals.  The domain name provides, by design, a
unique opportunity to establish a stable identifier online.
Predictable pricing from those monopoly suppliers is an important part
of the stability of the net.  Millions of people have bought domains
on the expectation of being able to renew them at about the same price
they have paid in the past.  Prepaying for 10 years is not a
substitute for stability, both because 10 years is not a long time in
business and personal events, and because it forces users to buy
renewals they wouldn't otherwise buy, purely to defend against
registries raising the price should a domain become notably
successful.

4.  Registries are, by all reports, profitable at the current capped
price and can and do make needed investments in infrastructure.
Indeed, the experience of the .net renewal strongly suggests that even
at $3 there would be multiple well qualified candidates to run these
three registries.

5.  The current system of fixed price caps has worked well for
registries, registrars, and most importantly for users since ICANN
began.  Removing price caps would benefit registries at the expense of
users.  If registries want to remove price caps, they need to show a
community benefit that outweighs the substantial costs imposed on
users, which they have not done.

6.  Traffic data, even that which has undergone some anonymization,
may still contain sensitive personal or competitive information.  At a
minimum, more public consultation should be held before registries are
permitted to sell or otherwise exploit that data.  Compliance of such
provisions with existing privacy laws in all the countries where
domains are registered must be assessed.

7. These contracts are explicitly designed for the benefit of users of
the DNS.  Remove the "no third-party beneficiaries" language to enable
relying registrants and users to police their own interests.

8. Periodic re-bidding serves as a stronger check on bad behavior than
the weak arbitration and mediation provisions within the contract.
The presumptive perpetual renewal should be dropped.



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