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Re: RE: [nc-org] Discussion with McLaughlin
Guillermo:
Thanks for your comments.
On the one hand, I agree that every
constituency should be able to review
and issue evaluations of applications.
And of course all aspects of the proposal
should be open and transparent.
I am proposing something that I don't
think conflicts with those goals.
The proposed "special status" of
NCDNHC or some other conrgegation of noncommercial
interests was ONLY to issue opinions on the
legitimacy of the Sponsoring Organization
as a representative/sponsor of noncommercial
interests. Obviously the NCDNHC would be
in a better position to do that than the
other constituencies.
Keep in mind that I am not proposing
that this review committee have any
special rights with respect to the
other aspects of the application, just
that it tell the board whether
particular SO's pass the bar of
credibility or not.
Does that answer your concerns?
>>> "Guillermo Carey C." <gcarey@carey.cl> 11/26/01 17:48 PM >>>
Milton,
I have consulted with my constituency and I think that version 4.1 looks OK.
Thank you for all the hard work on drafting it.
Regarding Andrew's proposal, we don't agree. There should be an open and
transparent process for selecting the new .org registry operator, based upon
proposals submitted to ICANN and made available to the public (with
appropriate redactions of confidential information). The NCDNH constituency
may have the chance to prepare a report advising the ICANN Board on what
decision to make among the applicants. So for that matter should any other
constituency or group, including IPC. As long as the process is transparent
there is no need to make any special arrangement for any constituency.
Andrew's approach will pobably affect competition in the SO, so we should
avoid these type of arrangements.
Guillermo
-----Mensaje original-----
De: Milton Mueller [mailto:mueller@syr.edu]
Enviado el: Sábado, 17 de Noviembre de 2001 23:47
Para: nc-org@dnso.org
Asunto: [nc-org] Discussion with McLaughlin
Because ICANN staff must draft an RFP
based on our policy, I sought out Andrew
McLaughlin, ICANN's chief policy officer,
during the Annual Meeting to discuss the
.org situation.
I received one strong message from him.
The decision criteria for the Board need
to be as specific as possible. ICANN
feels a little burned about the criticism
it received in selecting the new TLD
applicants in the last round, and would
like to avoid any appearance of
arbitrariness.
Another interesting fact: ICANN
staff does not mind, Andrew said, allowing
the DNSO Task Force to review its RFP
before it is publicly disseminated. As
long as there is a clear limit on the
number of review cycles (both of us agreeing
that the optimal number is one, given the
time constraints) he has no objection to
running it by the TF. This is interesting
because some one on the Names Council
objecting to the paragraph in our current
policy calling for TF review of the RFP.
I would imagine those objections would be
dropped once this is made clear.
Finally, Andrew proposed a very
interesting concept that we may want to
incorporate into the final policy document.
In keeping with his desire to avoid
subjecting the Board to vague and difficult
decisions, he suggested that DNSO
constituencies or external non-profit groups
might play a role in reviewing ORG applicants.
For example, the NCDNHC, or an international
committee of noncommercial organizations
galvanized by the NCDNHC, might review the
proposals for non-profit Sponsoring
Organizations and write a report on them
to the Board.
This could be particularly useful because
many commercial registries or other businesses
that would like to "get .org are likely
to form their own nonprofit SOs. The ICANN
Board, confronted with 5 or 10 of such
entities, might ot be in a good position
to judge which is real and has significant
support from the noncommercial Internet
community. Review by a broad committee of
noncommercial stakeholders might provide
the information they need, at little cost
to ICANN.
Please let me know what you think of this
concept.
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