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Re: [ga] Time to regulate the Re-Sellers


Jefsey and all assembly members,

  Your quite right in that no single or group of organizations can
regulate quality.  Nor can any single or group of organizations
regulate quantity.  The market place will do that on it's own.
The stakeholder/user or consumer is king!

Jefsey Morfin wrote:

> Objection your both Honors. You are discussing in XXth words using plain
> ICANNese language. We are XXIth as you may know. :-)
>
> What is the difference? "Yes the ICANN is to regulate. No the ICANN is not"
> has IMHO no meaning.
>
> We are not in a regulated environment. We are in a distributed
> international system and whatever someone does it has an impact. Willing or
> not what the ICANN does has an impact. On every thing. Like me having open
> a public nationwide 7000 TLD service today supporting 3.000.000 domain
> names  may have an impact - on my purse first since everythnig is still
> free :-)
>
> Now, what they do not understand is that we are not in a centralized
> federal legal system. Not even in a lose confederative one. We are at high
> sea in international waters. This does not means there is no law and no way
> to enforce them, but that the ways are different. There are Internet rules
> as there are universal navigation rules: BTW they are named the same
> n[aval]etiquette . There are good practices. There is good example. You
> cannot force, but you catalyze and find ways to oblige. Most of all: you
> must make bad things unnecessary or unrewarding. (Black Ivory trade stopped
> when it did not pay anymore because of the progress on the puchasing shore).
>
> Why such a spamming. Because a reseller wants to survive its Registrar in
> selling DNs. Why to sell DNs, why Registrars, why Registrars in a weak
> position?
>
> The problem is that ICANN shows wrong signals and catalyzes badly. The
> contract policy is so opposed to general simple rules that no one wants to
> sign them. Why do you want spammers to respect contracts ccTLDs does not
> wantto sign and no one can enforce. When ICANN starts creating colliders,
> why do you want TLD squatters to care? Why do you want people to care about
> digital divide when .org is first a big money issue.
>
> Great seamen in History had no more to fight: ennemies surrendered when
> seeing their flag. There is a long long way before ICANN is acknowledged
> that kind of respect.
>
> For example fostering competition was not to create a complex competition
> among unnecessary Registrars and hungry resellers, but to permit enough
> TLDs so there would have been quality competition between Registries, and
> consultants could have installed and developed the sites of their
> customers. Who cares about quality? Where are the consumer organizations
> qualifying good Registrars and poor ones - anyway they are blocked by NSI.
>
> jfc
>
> On 19:36 09/04/02, DannyYounger@cs.com said:
> >Michael,
> >
> >I disagree with your conclusion that <<This is not ICANN's mission.  It is
> >not a technical issue AT ALL>>
> >
> >As you well know, ICANN's current mission is not restricted "only" to
> >technical matters, as is made clear by the language in the MOU, such as:
> >"Collaborate on the design, development, and testing of a plan for
> >introduction of competition in domain name registration services"
> >
> >This part of our Mission calls for the establishment of "policy" to attend to
> >competitive concerns.    Perhaps you would like ICANN to re-define its
> >mission, but at the moment the creation of policies to govern competitive
> >practices is indeed within our mission.
> >--
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Regards,
--
Jeffrey A. Williams
Spokesman for INEGroup - (Over 121k members/stakeholdes strong!)
CEO/DIR. Internet Network Eng/SR. Java/CORBA Development Eng.
Information Network Eng. Group. INEG. INC.
E-Mail jwkckid1@ix.netcom.com
Contact Number:  972-244-3801 or 214-244-4827
Address: 5 East Kirkwood Blvd. Grapevine Texas 75208


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