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RE: [ga] Solemn public question to Peter de Blanc and ccTLD
Jefsey, and everyone:
I am deeply concerned with the .pe situation. That is a personal
concern. While I am the chair of the ccTLD AdCCom, I am NOT an executive
decision maker for the ccTLD constituency. I do my best to facilitate
consensus within my constituency, and to bring issues forward for their
consideration.
With all due respect, I am NOT going to answer your "Multiple Choice"
questionnaire.
However, I will ask my colleagues to comment, on the ccTLD list, on this
issue.
Assuming there is sufficient interest, which I do, we will develop a
position paper on this matter by the close of business in Montevideo.
You are probably aware, Jefsewy, that the ccTLD (or wwTLD) is in the
process of re-defining its relationship with ICANN.
It would certainly be premature to attempt to answer some of your
questions until this matter is resolved.
Rest assured that these matters of mutual interest will undergo
discussion, comment, and hopefully result in a unified consensus
position from the ccTLD community.
Peter de Blanc
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-ga@dnso.org [mailto:owner-ga@dnso.org] On Behalf Of Jefsey
Morfin
Sent: Saturday, July 21, 2001 8:31 AM
To: ga@dnso.org
Subject: [ga] Solemn public question to Peter de Blanc
we are all concerned by the IP lobby policy. Concerned but not doing
muach.
The result is that the Internet is going to be blocked into absurd,
contradictory and complex situations that a few reasonable moves by some
of
us could avoid. In particular by ccTLDs.
Dear Peter,
this mail is to you as the elected, acknowledged, respected and
undisputed
Chair of the ccTLDs organizations.
Today the new ".pe" ccTLD Manager is ... the Constitutional President of
the Peruvian Republic and the ".pe" registry the Peruvian TM and IP
Administration. To my knowledge this is - with Andorra - the second
country
in the world to decide that the color of the sky is green.
This is in direct violation with the spirit of the RFC 1591
<quote>
In case of a dispute between domain name registrants as to the rights to
a
particular name, the registration authority shall have no role or
responsibility other than to provide the contact information to both
parties. The registration of a domain name does not have any Trademark
status. It is up to the requestor to be sure he is not violating anyone
else's Trademark.
</unquote>
This rises a question to you, so we know what we are to do.
Peter, is your WWccTLD Alliance purely a registry association, whatever
the
registry management, or is it a ccTLD Manager association i.e. of
organisations with legitimacy from and duties to their National Internet
Communities?
To get a simple and clear response what are the functions you include or
not in the ccTLD Manager mission as a trustee of the National Internet
Community (please just cross the appropriate responses):
1. [ ] registry of the ISO 3166 TLD
2. [ ] registry for other national, local, etc TLDs
3. [ ] IP addresing delivery and management
4. [ ] DNS servers management
5. [ ] information of the National Internet Community, Gov. and
national
publics
6. [ ] animation of the National Internet Community
7. [ ] local defense of the National Internet Community
8. [ ] organization/provision of additional services to the National
Internet Community
9. [ ] organization/provision of additional national services to the
foreign users and communities
10.[ ] local defense of the Global Internet Community
11.[ ] international representation of the National Internet Community
12.[ ] common management of the Internet infrastructure as an associated
Member of the ICANN
Peter, Elisabeth, Oscar, Peter, Jean-Yves, Nigel, etc... if you do not
intend to protect us but only to lock yourself into the ccSO getho until
you die of grand age and lack of users, we have to organize ourself to
represent the Internet Users and our National Communities. Otherwise no
dialog will be made possible with the "Golden Block" (GIP, Staff, NSI,
DoC,
NSA). Your "ccTLD" business will either be repatriated to the US or
becoming a public service used by only a few, to the benefit of the
global
US registries. And we will reach a point where the user consensus which
makes the Internet will fade/blow away.
Nicknaming he iCANN "AmerICANN" is not a joke. It just recalls an
increasing unbalance and instability (the US DN and TLD are very
technically poor as we see it through Cochetti's letter and
disagreements
over ".us" RFP).
Unbalance means further unstability and we all hate that.
No one wants what one of us was fearing yesterday: that a European
Representatives team starts proposing (irt ".kid" Act, Peruvian
Resolucion
Suprema, Chinese position) a European legislation to protect European
Internet Industry interests against the AmerICANN's positions.
Time has come to think about network stability rather than about posting
limits and "current position" describing pertual policies about unique
authoritative roots.
Before we are commited to your "nuclear" arsenal.
Jefsey
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