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[ga] ALAC comment on gTLDs
ALAC Comments to the GNSO's new gTLDs Committee
http://alac.icann.org/gtld/comments-06may03.htm
The At-Large Advisory Committee welcomes the opportunity to submit
comments on the two issues on the table regarding new gTLDs:
1. Criteria for introduction of a limited number of sponsored gTLDs as
part of the Board's "proof of concept" initial round of TLD additions
2. Whether to structure the evolution of the generic top level
namespace in if so, how to do so.
Introduction:
At-large Internet users are both domain name registrants and users of
the domain name system. As users, they are well served by TLDs that
are not confusingly similar, enabling them to differentiate the names
they encounter and minimize typographic or semantic mistakes; they are
also served by a namespace that is inclusive and provides access to a
wide variety of speakers and information sources. As registrants, the
"at large" are perhaps the most likely to be underserved by
community-defined, chartered gTLDs. Not all individuals are
necessarily a part of any of these communities, yet they will want
places to publicize their small businesses, engage in political
debate, discuss their interests, and host weblogs, to name a few.
Categorization and eligibility requirements will often act as barriers
to entry to such registrants. As a whole, at-large registrants are
most likely to be served by a range of TLD options available to all
potential registrants, including a variety of true generics for those
that do not fit in neat categories.
These interests are compatible; confusion can be minimized without
narrowly structuring registrations. They are also compatible with
ICANN's limited mandate. ICANN should not be setting itself up as
judge of the utility or fitness of business plans, but only as a
technical judge of what is likely to create confusion or interfere
with the functioning of the domain name system.
I. Criteria to Be Used in the Selection of New Sponsored Top-Level
Domains
References: ICANN Paper
<http://www.icann.org/riodejaneiro/stld-rfp-topic.htm>
Report on Compliance by Sponsored gTLDs with the Registration
Requirements of Their Charters
<http://www.icann.org/committees/ntepptf/stld-compliance-report-25feb03.htm>
Both the paper and report on existing sponsored TLDs err in focusing
primarily on exclusion: Do the sponsored gTLDs represent a limited
community and adhere to their charters by permitting registrants only
from within that community? The question more important to the
public's communicative goals, however, is the flip side: Are there
people or organizations who are left without logical places to
register domain names, or who are denied registration in a sponsored
TLD whose charter they fit? It is easy to make the error rate
arbitrarily low by asking questions that examine only one kind of
error -- gTLDs could block all cybersquatters simply by refusing any
registrations, but that would hardly serve the point of adding new
gTLDs.
Instead, the Board should look, in both the sponsored additions and in
the general question of "structure," to ensuring that all who want to
establish online presences can obtain domain names.
Financial qualifications and entry fees can be barriers to entry of
new and smaller gTLD participants, as well as to non-profits. While
fees may be necessary to discourage spurious applications and to
recover assessment costs, minimal criteria can help to minimize costs
and fees. ICANN should examine the possible introduction of a second,
lower fee scale for non-profit applicants.
II. Whether the Generic Top-Level Namespace Should Be Structured
References: Draft 3.1.2 of the ICANN GNSO Council gTLDS committee
report ("Draft")
<http://www.dnso.org/dnso/notes/gTLDS-committee-conclusions-v3-1.2.htm>
At this stage, there appears to be general consensus on the GNSO gTLDs
Committee to advise against "structure" in the first instance. As the
Draft states, "It was agreed that a future expansion of the gTLD name
space should take place in such a way that was demand-driven and
bottom-up and in a way that increased competition while avoiding net
user confusion and deception. To the extent that this report has a set
of recommendations, it would seem there is support for the idea that
the structure of the future gTLD namespace should be structured
determined in a number of ways primarily by the choices of suppliers
and end users in the market." The ALAC supports this recommendation.
Market participants, including both businesses and non-commercial
organizations, users and suppliers, are better positioned to indicate
where new TLDs are needed through demand and willingness to supply.
The ALAC supports the proposition that proposal of a name by a
competent registry/delegant/sponsor provides as much "differentiation"
as is necessary. (Draft para. 14) Every TLD has a natural monopoly in
the SLDs registered under it, but ICANN policy should not extend that
monopoly any further. Put slightly differently, a name should be
acceptable within any gTLD structure if users want it and it does no
harm to the domain name system.
In order for market determination to be successful, ICANN must enable
a genuine competitive market to develop. At present, there appears to
be some tension between market competition and desire to protect
registrants from the consequences of registry failure (Draft paras.
10-12). The intermediate road ICANN has taken, a heavily regulated
market (rather than free market or openly acknowledged planning),
tends to produce false assumptions and conclusions about what "the
market" will support (and thus to justify further planning). The ALAC
supports the Draft's recommendations that zone file escrow and
transfer arrangements be investigated as ways to mitigate registry
failure. The ALAC also recommends further examination of separation of
the policy and technical roles of new-TLD-registries, as suggested in
Ross Rader's proposal for distinct Delegants (policy) and Operators
(technical), see
<http://r.tucows.com/archives/2003/03/13/new_gtlds_part_ii.htm>
Consistent with openness to a variety of names and business models,
ALAC supports expansion that allows both sponsored and unsponsored
names. (Draft para 15) Along with Milton Mueller and Lee McKnight, "We
do not oppose and may often favor the creation of new TLDs that are
sponsored and restricted. But many users have no interest in or need
for authenticated and restricted domains. That is why there are
thousands of times more registrations in open domains than in
restricted domains." Mueller & Mc Knight, "The post-.COM Internet,"
<http://dcc.syr.edu/miscarticles/NewTLDs-MM-LM.pdf>
IDNs: Any evaluation of IDNgTLDs (internationalized domain name
generic TLDs) should ensure participation in the linguistic review for
confusion by the language community that would primarily use and be
affected by the IDN policy. The ALAC plans to discuss IDNs in more
detail in a separate document.
--
vb. [Vittorio Bertola - vb [at] bertola.eu.org]<---
-------------------> http://bertola.eu.org/ <-----------------------
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