Last update: Sun Aug 17 22:48:44 CEST 2003 |
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On the General Assembly, there's currently a discussion about how to enforce registrars' obligations, for instance as far as the procedure for transferring a domain name between two registrars is concerned. Wed Jul 31 10:54:50 CEST 2002 #
Bret notes that newspapers' web sites don't link to blogs, but seem to like links from blogs. While The Register may not precisely qualify as a newspaper, at least one of their writers openly uses blogs as a source of information: This article about Verisign's discrimination suit links to Ross Rader's blog, and this article about the Auerbach judgmenet actually links to Bret's notes. Tue Jul 30 22:55:55 CEST 2002 #
Online press coverage about today's court decision starts to come in, and the EFF has started to update its web site:
Tue Jul 30 03:33:00 CEST 2002 #
You may notice that some items in this weblog now have links to "Related Stories". These links are not added manually, but generated automatically from RSS feeds. Tue Jul 30 01:41:10 CEST 2002 #
Mon Jul 29 22:49:50 CEST 2002 #
The DNSO secretariat has posted an updated version of the minutes for the July 24 call. Also, NC chair Philip Sheppard has presented the WLS report to the board. Mon Jul 29 15:00:44 CEST 2002 #
The Blueprint for ICANN Evolution and Reform talks about a 30-45 day cycle for Task Forces' policy-making. While some enthusiastically welcome this perspective, some doubts about the practical feasibility may be in order - with Task Forces going on extensive fact-finding expeditions, and with constituencies trying to micro-manage the process. So, how realistic is the evolution and reform committee's idea? Mon Jul 29 12:40:07 CEST 2002 #
Milton Mueller has posted a response to Ben Edelman's study of .cc, .ws, .tv registrations over on ICANNwatch. While occasionally a bit harsh in tone, Milton makes a number of valid points about Ben's conclusions. In a semi-anonymous comment to the article, he also points to a study of content provided under .info which undermines the conclusions of the Berkman study, by proving that a more desirable string (.info) can fairly rapidly gather 5 times the number of registrations of the open ccTLDs, as well as a significant number of "real" websites, as he writes. Mon Jul 29 09:48:18 CEST 2002 #
Marilyn Cade (Transfers Task Force chair) has sent (to the Task Force) a clarification concerning SnapNames' response to the Names Council's vote on the proposed Wait Listing Service. Sun Jul 28 16:44:15 CEST 2002 #
This time, the company we all trust has apparently been caught with false testimony at trial, reports Ross Rader's weblog. Sat Jul 27 18:30:40 CEST 2002 #
Kevin Werbach asks about free web site tracking services in his blog. Well, the easiest approach is, of course, to do it yourself. Sat Jul 27 12:59:27 CEST 2002 #
SnapNames has published a response to the Names Council's decision on WLS (minutes). Interestingly, the statement was posted to ICANN's public forum on behalf of SnapNames.com by Susan Crawford, a partner at the same law firm which works for Verisign. Sat Jul 27 09:10:52 CEST 2002 #
The DNSO secretariat has posted draft minutes of Wednesday's Names Council telephone conference. Fri Jul 26 19:00:05 CEST 2002 #
You may notice some slight changes to the lay-out of this site. Behind that is an almost complete re-write of the underlying set of scripts (basically, replacing shell hell by something nicer written in perl). Right now, the most visible change is that this blog now has stories for longer items (so the start page isn't cluttered). But it's prepared for more to come in the future. Fri Jul 26 17:53:06 CEST 2002 #
A seemingly harmless message from .museum's Cary Karp on observers at NC meetings triggered a short exchange of notes on the Names Council list which shed a spotlight on the very different ideas various players have about the role of the Names Council and its members. Fri Jul 26 10:51:45 CEST 2002 #
ICANN's first chairman Esther Dyson (who is going to help fill out the details of an at-large advisory committee during ICANN's evolution and reform implementation process) has been talking to Salon about public participation in ICANN. According to Dyson, the long-term goal is elections, but it's not the near-term mechanism. Thu Jul 25 12:29:24 CEST 2002 #
Today's Names Council telephone conference recording is now available for download. George Kirikos has listened to it and has posted a summary of the part of the call concerning the Wait Listing Service. Also, some additional material for the Task Force's report is available. This includes a statement from the IPC, a statement from the gTLDs, and a collection of supporting material. Update: Jeff Neumann (the gTLD registry constituency's chair, but not a member of the council) has posted a follow-up in which he states that the Names Council's vote was a recognition that the report adequatley represents the view of those that participated in the Task Force. It was not approval for the substance contained within the report. I can offer no clarification on this myself since I did not participate in the conference call (other obligations took priority), and have not found the time to listen to the recording. It seems like we'll have to wait for the call's official minutes. Wed Jul 24 20:37:29 CEST 2002 #
The Names Council's Transfer Task Force has made its WLS report available. The report recommends that the Wait Listing Service suggested by Verisign Registry and SnapNames should be rejected; the Intellectual Property and gTLD registry constituencies objected. (The results of the Task Force's vote on the individual recommendations are also available separately.) The report will be discussed at today's Names Council telephone conference, and will then be forwarded to the ICANN board. Wed Jul 24 14:20:51 CEST 2002 #
The Washington Post reports about statements former presidential adviser Ira Magaziner made on ICANN during a book forum on Milton Mueller's Ruling the Root today: According to the article, Magaziner would disapprove of a plan that abandoned democratic involvement from individuals and non-governmental organizations (NGOs). Remarks made by ICANN's first CEO Mike Roberts at the same event are also available. Wed Jul 24 00:09:21 CEST 2002 #
Harvard's Ben Edelman has done another analysis. This time, he has looked at Registrations in Open ccTLDs, in order to quantify the domains' size, usage, and registration patterns. His findings include substantial defensive registrations, and substantial cybersquatting. Some discussion of this is going on at ICANNwatch. Tue Jul 23 23:59:52 CEST 2002 #
Did you ask Google for ICANN news today? I only do that unregularly, but repeatedly find the results quite helpful. For instance if anyone wonders where all the contributions to ICANN's WLS public forum and the signatures to the anti-WLS petition come from, this article from The Register may be one source. Sun Jul 21 18:07:23 CEST 2002 #
The folks at icannatlarge.com are going to vote on a supervisory panel with a 12 months mandate. The deadline for nominations and voter registration will expire tomorrow at 24:00 UTC. The deadline for nomination acceptances will end on Tuesday, 12:00 UTC. The vote itself is going to take place from July 28 to August 4. Sun Jul 21 17:56:55 CEST 2002 #
The WHOIS Task Force's final report is available for public comment at the DNSO web site. Comments should be sent to <comments-whois@dnso.org>. The incoming comments are, of course, archived. Sun Jul 21 17:45:39 CEST 2002 #
Alexander Svensson and myself have produced some bullet points on reforming the General Assembly. In short, we don't believe that the Names Council's approach that the GA should be restricted to cross-constituency discussions is the right approach. Sun Jul 21 17:37:40 CEST 2002 #
The minutes for the Names Council's call on July 11 have been posted to the Council's mailing list. They will be up for adoption at the next teleconference on July 24, and may be subject to corrections. Thu Jul 18 11:03:48 CEST 2002 #
Alexander Svensson reports that Mouhamet Diop has been elected to ICANN's board by the Address Supporting Organization. Diop will replace Rob Blokzijl on the board. Wed Jul 17 00:59:14 CEST 2002 #
Harold Feld, who represents the NCDNHC on the Names Council, has written (as part of a discussion with ICANN board member Jonathan Cohen) an excellent analysis of the respective roles the Board and the DNSO are going to take in the reformed ICANN. Warning: Long! Sat Jul 13 10:27:04 CEST 2002 #
The recording from today's names council teleconference is available. Agenda item 5, ICANN and names council reform, only took about 5 minutes of the conference, so there's not much new on that topic. For the rest, please see Alexander's notes. Thu Jul 11 17:48:43 CEST 2002 #
Donna Wentworth's Copyfight Blog has a tour of the ILAW conference, with links to the notes published by various participants. Wed Jul 10 18:33:07 CEST 2002 #
Harold Feld has forwarded a letter from Stuart Lynn to the NCDNHC's discuss list. In that letter, the ICANN CEO accepts the NCDNHC's offer to help with the evaluation of the .org bids, and suggests that the NCDNHC should focus on criteria 4, 5, 6 of the evaluation process: Differentiation of the .org TLD, Inclusion of mechanisms for promoting the registry's operation in a manner that is responsive to the needs, concerns, and views of the noncommercial Internet user community, and Level of support for the proposal from .org registrants. What makes this interesting is the GNR proposal which suggests travel funding for the NCDNHC and a .org steering committee in which the NCDNHC's leadership is supposed to participate. To me, this is a conflict of interests for the NCDNHC. Milton Mueller, who played a key role in drafting the DNSO's .org policy, disagrees strongly. Wed Jul 10 12:09:33 CEST 2002 #
This interesting notice sent by Verisign to a "valued customer" who wants to leave made it to Declan McCullagh's politech list and to a variety of other mailing lists. Just in time to provide even more illustration to Bret Fausett's excellent essay: If I Were Stratton Sclavos. Tue Jul 9 09:05:45 CEST 2002 #
George Kirikos has sent a pointer to a report about the OECD's activities with respect to WHOIS accuracy: The organization's secretary-general has sent a letter to Stuart Lynn (and a copy to the GAC's chair). In that letter, the OECD points ICANN to Ben Edelman's study of invalid WHOIS entries, and to its own experience with losing ocde.org. ICANN is urged to require the registrars in question, in particular NameScout, to cease sponsoring patently false registrations which they maintain. In the subsequent discussion on the GA list, Rick Wesson pointed out that [i]t is a completely valid reaction to use inaccurate information in a whois entry to avoid spam/uce and other marketing liturature, I get at lease on peace of junk mail per day sent to addresses listed in a whois database. In a different branch of the discussion, Karl Auerbach suggested that [t]he interests of a few trademark owners is hardly a reason to use a system - DNS whois - that is highly susceptable to false or erroneous data and, when accurate, is a major violation of privacy. In response to this, George Kirikos suggested a "Legal Contact" role (which could be the ISP, Technical Contact, the Registrant, or someone else the Registrant chooses to use) who is held legally responsible for problems originating from a domain, with accurate info that IS in the WHOIS for that contact? I think that's all people ultimately need to reach, someone who is responsible. Allan Liska, in response, suggested to just use the domain's technical contact field for this function. In a follow-up to this message, George Kirikos suggests DMCA-like safe harbour provisions for the person taking this role. Mon Jul 8 09:27:12 CEST 2002 #
The presentations from ISOC.lu's July 4 conference are available in PowerPoint format: Vint Cerf, Latif Ladid. Sun Jul 7 19:59:31 CEST 2002 #
Yesterday, I attended ISOC.LU's afternoon event with Vint Cerf. Actually, Vint was the second speaker: First, Latif Ladid gave a highly entertaining advocacy talk on the need for a transition to IPv6. One of the key points of that talk was the emphasis on an open, end-to-end Internet, as opposed to today's online world with with dynamic IP addresses, NAT, and similar evils. Vint's talk (the first part of which was not "corrupted" by Powerpoint slides ;) began with a short run-down of the Internet's history, starting in the early ARPANET days. Besides lots of nice anecdotes, his key point was once again openness: Keep the standards open, keep the uses open. Since this was an event organized by ISOC, he also elaborated on the things ISOC chapters could do. In particular, Vint mentioned policy development for the Internet, given that many governments and legislatures are currently making policy for an Internet they may not understand. ICANN and today's hard policy issues were only touched, though - they did not play a key role in either the talks, or the subsequent panel discussion. Notes on the other event of the day, the Domain Name summit in Paris, can be found in Robert Shaw's blog. Fri Jul 5 09:09:21 CEST 2002 #
It seems like July 4 is packed with Internet-related events in Europe: In Paris, the first États généraux européens du nommage Internet will happen, with talks by Alejandro Pisanty and Philip Sheppard. I'm just wondering who's the Tiers-État this time? Wed Jul 3 11:23:45 CEST 2002 #
Some more material on the Bucharest meetings has become available: The GAC has made its agenda, a Media Communiqué, and its statement on ICANN Reform available. The statement is the communiqué read during the public forum. Still, you should really read the original version: The GAC is, for instance, suggesting a number of subtle, but important changes to ICANN's proposed mission statement I didn't catch during the public forum session. Also, some more archived webcasts are available from the official remote participation page: the press event on Tuesday, and the board meeting wrap-up on Friday. It's, of course, also all linked from the Bucharest summary page. Wed Jul 3 10:38:27 CEST 2002 #
I'm continuing to make an attempt at following the Berkman center's ILAW event, as far as that's possible through the excellent notes in the Copyfight blog and by Dan Gillmor. Must be a fascinating event. Yesterday's session included talks by Lessig on architecture as regulation [exercise for the reader: apply this to whois policy, privacy protection, and the architectural question of thin vs. thick registries], and by Zittrain on ICANN: What brought us to the point where ICANNwatch is a site you might need to watch? One note I found particularly interesting was a dialogue during the final discussion, as reported in the Copyfight blog: Charlie [Nesson] asks JZ [Zittrain]: "Jonathan, you follow Larry [Lessig] and tell story of ICANN. The message is that the effort was all miscast from the beginning. Stuart Lynn says the government must come in. So are you as pessimistic about the Net as Larry?" JZ: "No, definitely not. But I remember that we threw a meeting here, about ICANN membership; we were looking for a good, fair system, as disinterested academics. We had [inaudible] come in, from Common Cause. He said 'We tried membership; it failed.' I think the board runs it, now. And this is Common Cause. There's sort of a lesson in that." Today, things focus on the evolution of copyright law in the US. Tue Jul 2 21:01:27 CEST 2002 #
ISOC.lu has sent out a reminder about their July 4 conference with Vint Cerf. They are at 250 booked attendees, now. The conference will also be webcast, at 14:30 CEST. (The message translates that as 13:30 GMT, but I suppose they just got the daylight saving time wrong.) Tue Jul 2 20:59:26 CEST 2002 #
Dan Gillmor is participating in the Berkman Center's Internet Law Program this week, and taking notes. More notes are in Donna Wentworth's Copyfight blog. Tue Jul 2 00:29:07 CEST 2002 #
Ben Edelman has done another study: This time, he has taken names (100 each, from the following categories: top brand names, random brand names, Boston Yellow Page entries, and selective and random colleges and universities in the US), and investigated how successful (1) domain name guessing, (2) Google's I'm feeling lucky button, (3) RealNames were as strategies to find the web sites in question. The objective of the study was to help to understand the extent to which DNS is already used as or already functions as a directory. I find the first part of this a bit misleading, by the way: The study can at most show how usable the DNS is as a directory. It cannot demonstrate whether users actually use it as one - to quantify that, you'd have to actually observe user behavior. The study's results: Google is best across all categories in matching Ben's hypothetical user expectation. Ben further writes on the DNSO's GA list: I first find that DNS is nearly as accurate as Google among a sample of the world's largest brands. However, for smaller brands, smaller companies, and less selective educational institutions, DNS's accuracy is substantially worse than Google's. These results suggest that while DNS well serves the needs of the largest companies, it is less successful in providing intuitive naming services to small businesses and other smaller organizations. William Walsh responded to Ben's statement, and suggested that just because something CAN be used for some in a fashion, does not mean that it is, was, or should be intended to work that way, or that it should work that way for all people. Search engines and other directory services are the way to go for that. Mon Jul 1 23:52:48 CEST 2002 #
Mon Jul 1 10:25:59 CEST 2002 #
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About This is the personal blog of Thomas Roessler. It's mostly used for comments regarding ICANN, and matters of ICANN's Generic Names Supporting Organization and At-Large Advisory Committee (ALAC). |