[ga] Fair and reasonable questions ignored by ICANN for 73 days
Title: Help This mail was first sent on 12th May : I regard it
as wholly unacceptable that an organisation entrusted with the open
administration of a worldwide resource should fail even to acknowledge receipt
of mail raising serious, reasonably expressed concerns and questions, after 73
days and repeated requests for a response.
Is this how ICANN should run its affairs? Is it
Stuart Lynn's promise of improved openness and responsiveness?
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Open Letter to Dan Halloran. May 12th
2002.
(Dan Halloran is ICANN's registrar liaison
executive.)
Dan
I've just been reading the ICANN Advisory
concerning WHOIS data accuracy,
as published at: http://www.icann.org/announcements/advisory-10may02.htm
I'd be grateful if you could respond to me and the
community, with answers
to the following questions:
1. It appears that Yesnic submitted at least 269
applications in the .info
Sunrise process,
which were duly registered on the basis of the Trademark
information which
they submitted. Subsequently around 200 of these have
been successfully
challenged by Afilias and made available in their second
landrush.
(a) What steps has ICANN taken to find out whether
Yesnic submitted false
Trademark data?
(b) If Yesnic is shown to have submitted false
data, does ICANN recognise a
responsibility to the general public to call into
question their accreditation,
since ICANN
accreditation is supposed to signal to the public that a Registrar
is endorsed by ICANN and the accreditation of other registrars would lose its
value if discredited by any registrar
who had breached the public trust?
(c) If ICANN has not yet ascertained all the facts,
will you undertake to carry
out an investigation
and report back to the community on your findings in an
open and transparent manner, since public trust in ICANN-accredited registrars
is a very important matter?
2. It appears that DomainBank breached the
Registry/Registrar rules in the
submission of 93
.info Sunrise names on behalf of William Lorenz of Strategic
Domains. This case has been widely publicised and previously reported to
ICANN on several occasions. The
Registry/Registrar rules stipulate that to
sponsor a Sunrise name, registrars had to ensure
that four data fields were
properly entered: Trademark Name; Trademark Number;
Trademark Country;
Trademark Date.
DomainBank submitted 93 names which lacked information
in ALL FOUR of these datafields.
(a) Given Hal Lubsen's association both with
DomainBank AND with Afilias
(as its CEO), can ICANN please confirm that the Afilias rules were indeed
abused in this case? This is a matter which
concerns the public because of
demonstrable conflict of interest (in that these
visibly ineligible applications
were registered on
spurious grounds - to the benefit of both DomainBank and
Afilias, with both of which Mr Lubsen was closely associated). It is also a
matter of public concern, because if even the
Afilias CEO's registrar
company was abusing the Afilias rules and
submitting invalid WHOIS data,
what trust can there
be in any ICANN Registry or Accredited Registrar?
(b) Will ICANN please state what censure, actions
or sanctions have / or
will be taken against the parties involved? Please bear in mind that
consumers lost money, because many ICANN-accredited
registrars
charged non-refundable fees to pre-register names
in anticipation of
the .info Landrush. When DomainBank sponsored these 93 names in
the .info Sunrise, customers (including myself)
lost the chance of obtaining
some of these specific names in the Landrush - a
product we had paid for.
This loss may well have been replicated over 100,000 times in the .info
Sunrise fiasco.
(c) If ICANN has not yet investigated this serious
case, will you undertake
to report back on your findings and inform me and the community of your
findings and actions - in an open and
transparent manner?
3. In the case of Spy Productions, which is a
well-documented case where
the registrar admitted he filled in fake Trademark data in the .info Sunrise to
give his customers a chance, I note that ICANN
holds the sponsoring
Registrar responsible for accurate
information, not the reseller. From your
advisory: "The
registrar obligations outlined above (as
well as all other
registrar obligations under the RAA) apply with
equal force to all
registrations sponsored by a registrar in any TLD
for which it is accredited
by ICANN, whether those registrations were placed directly with the registrar
or through some agent or reseller. In other
words, registrars are responsible
for providing Whois data (and correcting any
reported inaccuracies in that data)
for all names under their sponsorship, including
the data pertaining to
customers of their resellers."
(a) Please could you confirm whether ICANN has
investigated this
well-publicised case of WHOIS abuse?
(b) Has either Tucows or ICANN taken any action in
response to these events,
to protect the broad internet public?
(c) Does ICANN have a mechanism for "shutting down"
resellers, for example
by requiring defined standards from ICANN's own accredited Registrars?
(d) Would ICANN consider removing Tucows
accreditation if they failed to police
their own resellers (as appears to have happened in this instance)?
4. It appears that in the .biz Group 2B names
release, Signature Domains
gained a strong advantage over other consumers and the general public, by
submitting a very short list of applications on
behalf of one of their own
partners (Mr Joshua Blacker). ICANN has remained
silent on this matter, and
Signature Domains remains an ICANN-accredited registrar. Only ten names
were registered (for Mr Blacker) and no-one else
got any (probably because
this was an exclusive list not available for the
public).
(a) Will ICANN take action BEFORE .info LR2 to make
sure that Registrars
do not 'game' the system by submitting exclusive lists like these? This is a
matter which goes beyond Neulevel or Afilias,
because it requires revisions
of the Agreements
already in place, and because ICANN should not be
content to preside over processes which break
their requirement of the public
having fair and unprejudiced access to domain
names.
(b) Will you please inform me and the community
what action will be taken
by Neulevel (initially) and ICANN (with
reference to accreditation) in the case
of Signature Domains - if it is found that they
broke any Agreements or ICANN
rules? At the heart
of this is a profound public concern that registrars should
NOT simply exist for their own benefit. In the case
of Signature Domains and
the .biz 2B, this is exactly the concern that has
been generated.
(c) What is the general policy of ICANN with regard
to removing
ICANN-accreditation? (If a registrar fulfils the
technical requirements for
accreditation, does that mean that they can breach
agreements and rules with
impunity, at the expense of the general public - and does ICANN acknowledge a
responsibility to the public to make sure that if
they accredit registrars, those
registrars maintain certain
standards?)
5. Finally, given the fact that the worst elements
of the registrar community
might prove incapable of regulating themselves (and
many people would say
this was pretty self-evident) is it not in the
interests of the consumer and the
internet public for ICANN to make its "Best Practices for Registrars" into
"Mandatory Practices for Registrars" upon which
their accreditation depends?
Dan, thank you for the time you may give to these
questions, which I believe
deserve to be taken seriously and answered openly
and in detail, part by part.
I would be grateful if you could respond in any
correspondence in open form,
as I may want to refer to your comments in
part or in whole on one or several
ICANN mailing lists. (This message is copied to the
ga-list.)
If ICANN deserves to retain its administration of
the DNS, it must be based on
the central responsibility of putting the internet
public first, and ensuring that
domain names are distributed openly, validly, and
fairly.
Your advisory on WHOIS touches on areas of
responsibility that registrars have.
If such advice (and other ICANN agreements)
are just words then they will fail to
protect the public and ICANN will fail in its
mission.
If such advice (and the other rules of operations
for registries and registrars) are
to properly protect the public, then you need to
demonstrate that they cannot be
flouted and ignored. What is the point of telling
the public that a registrar is
ICANN-accredited, if that accreditation means
nothing more than technical
capability and the registrar is allowed to cheat or
break rules in a way which
makes the public suffer?
Kind regards
Richard Henderson
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