On 2015-09-27 01:55, Stephen Deerhake wrote:
Thus it's my contention that if the WG continues down this path, this project will fail. Maybe that's what some members of the WG want; I don't know…
If backed into a corner, so be it. I challenge your implication that a willingness to contemplate continuation of the status quo constitutes bad faith. There are many of us who approached this CCWG in good faith (and invested huge amounts of time and effort in trying to make it work) but who still have "red lines" - minimum requirements without which they would prefer that transition did not proceed. I count myself within that class. My own red line is that an aggrieved registrant who stands to lose their domain as a result of ICANN policy must have the right to challenge the legitimacy of that policy on the grounds that it is outside ICANN's scope, and that that challenge must be before a fair and objective independent panel with the power to quash the policy. We have made considerable progress toward this goal. So far, the panel, its independence, its decision-making standard and (I think) its power, have all been accepted. But as for the *right* to challenge, while the Board says it is willing to accept this in principle, it rejects the SMM, which is the only mechanism we have found for making the right to seek redress enforceable. By that I mean, the SMM is the only mechanism which could correct and force ICANN to enter into the IRP if, in a particular case, it refused to do so. The MEM - another layer of arbitration - would not give anyone the capability to force ICANN to enter the IRP, because the Board could also refuse to accept arbitration by the MEM. This is a problem for me. I have no difficulty or embarrassment about saying that I would prefer that the entire transition failed than that it proceed without a satisfactory resolution of this point. But my own red line is really very modest. Some may have more ambitious demands, and I don't think that that would be illegitimate. Consider how we began this whole process. The NTIA has exercised a historic stewardship of the DNS and a de facto oversight of ICANN. NTIA periodically imposes on ICANN a new contract, one that ICANN simply cannot reject. As a consequence, NTIA has the effective and enforceable powers to initiate and enforce change in ICANN. As a result of this special relationship NTIA was in a position to, and did in fact, effect change within ICANN that nobody else would have been capable of bringing about. When we began this process, NTIA declared that it wanted a proposal to transition its historic role to the global multistakeholder community. If some people interpreted this as meaning that the global multistakeholder community must gain an effective and enforceable mechanism to bring about change within ICANN, over the heads of a Board that resisted that change, I wouldn't think that would be an unreasonable reading of what was offered. Nor do I think it would be unreasonable for someone to conclude that the CCWG's proposal - much less the Board's counter-proposal - falls significantly short of that ambition. So if someone concluded that it was better to remain with the current position where at least /someone/ had the power to force ICANN to change (especially since the NTIA's record in this regard is known and benign) then I don't think it would be fair to cast a person with such a view as unreasonable or as some sort of saboteur. But as I say, I am not myself demanding the full accountability of ICANN and the complete subordination of its institutional bureaucracy to the global multistakeholder community. If I can be certain that it can be contained within its defined scope, I will be satisfied. Sadly, as of today, I am not being offered even that much. Kind Regards, Malcolm. -- Malcolm Hutty | tel: +44 20 7645 3523 Head of Public Affairs | Read the LINX Public Affairs blog London Internet Exchange | http://publicaffairs.linx.net/ London Internet Exchange Ltd 21-27 St Thomas Street, London SE1 9RY Company Registered in England No. 3137929 Trinity Court, Trinity Street, Peterborough PE1 1DA