On Fri, Nov 20, 2015 at 12:16 PM, Mueller, Milton L <milton@gatech.edu> wrote:

As stated in the provision, a "service" for the purpose of this clause is "any software process that accepts connections for the Internet) that use the Internet's unique identifiers." As such, it is clearly incorrect to say that "registrars/registries" are "services that use the Internet's unique identifiers.""  

 

Greg: I don’t see how it is “clearly incorrect.” Are you saying that registry and registrar services don’t use IP addresses or domains?

​GS: I am saying that the type of "use" referred to here is not the use in the sense of owning a domain name or typing in a domain name, whether its being done by registry operators, registrars or my Aunt Tillie.  They may initiate a chain of events that leads to a software process "using" an IP address or domain name, but initiating that chain of events is not using a unique identifier, any more than I use a carburetor when I drive a car. ​

 

THAT is clearly incorrect. Are you saying they are not services?

​GS:  In the great wide world, "services' can refer to operations that are carried out by "service providers," and more loosely, even to those "service providers" themselves.  In that context, sure, they are services, and my law firm is a service, and the nail salon downstairs is a service.  What I'm saying ​is that, in this context, in this provision, "service" does not refer to businesses that provide services, and not even to the service that the service provider provides directly to another business or individual.  In this context, service refers to processes such as web services (as defined in my prior email) and mail services (as defined in my prior email). 

 

THAT is clearly incorrect. So what would this prohibit ICANN from doing? ICANN board comments asks for such specifics and it is a legitimate request.

 

David’s formulation of the prohibition is much clearer, in that it accurately reflects the intent of the prohibition. Your reversion to very specific technical descriptions, raises the concern that ICANN could regulate the business without necessarily regulating the technology. If that is your intent, please make it clear.

​GS:  I disagree (not surprisingly) with your characterization of David's formulation.  As for my intent, I don't see how you derive what you've said from what I've said.  We are dealing with a technical process, so some "reversion" to technical descriptions is inevitable as we explore meaning, even if what we want is a more high-level definition that is as technology neutral as possible.  ​

 

--MM

 

"ICANN should not be allowed to impose -- directly or indirectly, via its contracts -- obligations on persons or entities whose only connection to the DNS is that they use a domain name for Internet communication, except for implementation of policies for which uniform or coordinated resolution is reasonably necessary to facilitate the openness, interoperability, resilience, security and/or stability of the DNS; and which are developed through a bottomup, consensus-based multi-stakeholder process and designed to ensure the stable and secure operation of the Internet’s unique names systems."

David