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Re: [ga] IDNO -- This affects you.


On Sat, 13 Oct 2001, William S. Lovell wrote:
> Jonathan Weinberg wrote:
> 
> >         Amadeu (whom I also like) didn't make the statements attributed to
> > him in this thread, so the revisionism isn't his.
> >         I think Bill Lovell is referring to
> > <http://www.dnso.org/clubpublic/ga/Arc08/msg00384.html>.  What Amadeu said
> > there was that "the original design of the DNSO was to provide a place for
> > functional interests in DNS to be represented," that "users" got
> > representation because they were considered to play a functional role, and
> > that the user group was separated into commercial and noncommercial
> > constituencies because the two groups were seen as too different to
> > coexist in a single constituency.  The IPC, he suggests, was added not
> > because it played a functional role, but because it was unavoidable given
> > the "IP-DN question on the table."  He goes on to suggest that an
> > individuals' constituency is unnecessary because "an individual would be
> > either a commercial or non-commecial user, or both, and such
> > constituencies already exist."  I don't happen to agree with him, but he
> > plainly isn't making the "ICANN is a technical body so users should have
> > no role" argument.
> >
> > Jon
> 
> Ah, but read on to this (and that indeed was what I was referring to
> -- thank you for digging it out): > But I don't see "individual"as a
> "function" compared to "registry" or "commercial > registrants" or
> "non-commercial registrant". I believe that is what I said he said:
> essentially, individuals had no function and thus needed no
> representation. Those "functions," I believe, are technical functions,
> since he also says that the IPC was added even though it had no
> "function" in that sense (i.e., in the same way that individuals had
> no function). So he plainly did make that argument, whatever he may
> have intended.

	He said that *being an individual* was not a function.  Rather,
individuals are commercial and noncommercial users, and perform a function
(just as do other users) when they act in those capacities.  Thus, he
argued, individuals shouldn't get representation qua individuals; they
should get representation qua users.  There's nothing in his discussion
about technical vs. nontechnical functions, and however one draws that
line, Amadeu makes it clear that he thinks the function performed by
"users" is one that should be represented.  



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