Becky Burr wrote:
Malcolm is correct that proposed text is different from the Report. In the course of drafting, the CCWG attorneys pointed out that the construct (no regulation of services etc.) could create unintended consequences related to the application of antitrust law. This was viewed as particularly problematic under the current circumstances, where the supervision of the US government (which at least arguably provides some protection for ICANN) is being withdrawn.
OK, I have no problem with finding an substitute for the word "regulate".
We attempted to eliminate this problem and discussed several approaches to doing so. This approach seemed to get at the concern that was animating the CCWG in its discussions on this point, use of the Registry Agreement and Registrar Accreditation Agreement to regulate registrant conduct.
Reason noted.
Malcolm is correct, of course, that ICANN might attempt to use some other vehicle to regulate content.
OK, so we seem to be in agreement.
But it is critical to keep in mind that the prohibition on regulation is, by nature, a “belt and suspenders” approach. Keep in mind that ICANN is prohibited from doing exceeding its Mission. See Section 1.1.(b): “ICANN shall not act outside its Mission.” So no matter what other mechanism ICANN might find to attempt to regulate content, the Bylaws simply prohibit that.
Technically true, but the belt and bracers was wanted, and for good reasons. We did discuss at length whether this belt-and-bracer was superfluous; this is hardly a provision that came about inadvertently. We came to a clear and considered conclusion that it was necessary, and that was the decision approved by Chartering Organisations. That decision shouldn't now be undermined by incomplete implementation. So I will take your message as acceptance of the discrepancy and need to fix it, and read the above paragraph as a "by-the-way", rather than as an attempt to argue that the draft Bylaw can remain as it is.
We are open to other constructs, so long as they don’t raise the same antitrust concerns identified by Holly and Rosemary in our discussions. At a minimum, that requires us to avoid the term “regulation” and to be as concrete as possible.
I did offer one alternative construct (see my previous message, copied below); Greg and Bradley have criticised it. Bradley offered another, and I gave my own criticism of that. Perhaps it is best for us in CCWG to leave the implementation team to consider the feedback given and come back with a proposal, working to the objective of generalising this clause to match the generality of the Report. Malcolm.
On 08/04/2016 12:28, Malcolm Hutty wrote:
I have found a discrepancy between CCWG Final Report and the implementation of the draft Bylaws in the Mission section.
The Report approved by the Chartering Organisations says:
"* Clarify that ICANN’s Mission does not include the regulation of services that use the Domain Name System or the regulation of the content these services carry or provide." (paragraph 134)
The Draft Bylaws implements this as follows: "* ICANN shall not use its contracts with registries and registrars to impose terms and conditions that exceed the scope of ICANN’s Mission on services that use the Internet’s unique identifiers or the content that such services carry or provide." (Article I Section 1.1 (c))
Firstly, this draft bylaw would pick on only one means by which ICANN might seek to regulate content (through the RA or RAA contracts), and prohibits that. There is no such limitation in the CCWG Report: our Report prohibits any attempt to regulate content by ICANN, whether through the RA/RAA contracts or by any other means.
Certainly, the RA/RAA contract is the most likely means by which ICANN might seek to regulate content and services. However, if ICANN manages to come up with some other means (including means that cannot now be imagined) then a full implementation of the CCWG Report would cover that too.
This is a clear and objective discrepancy.
Secondly, the CCWG Report expresses this limitation as an exclusion from the Mission. That was quite deliberate, and significant. We never expressed this section as a bare prohibition on some action, it was always considered to be essential that it was a Mission limitation.
This aspect of the Report's proposal is not reflected in the draft bylaw at all. That is also clear discrepancy.
The significance of this is that a Mission limitation has a broader scope. Excluding regulation of content from the Mission means any action aimed at regulating content can be challenged, including actions that (if done for some legitimate purpose) would be entirely OK. By contrast, a Bylaw that merely prohibits a certain class of action is weaker, because it says it's OK for ICANN to regulate content if it can find some way of doing so within its permitted powers. That's simply not consistent with the Report approved by the Chartering Organisations.
Finally, in the future there may arise some disagreement as to whether a specific activity constitutes "regulation", in particular in marginal cases. Before we adopted the Report, our lawyers advised us not to seek to tightly define this in every particular, but to allow precedent to develop as cases arise. We accepted that advice. The implementation team should therefore avoid seeking to resolve that deliberate ambiguity in favour of the narrowest possible definition of regulation: again, that's not consistent with the Report.
I therefore propose we transmit the following request to the implementation team.
"Article I Section 1.1(c) implements paragraph 134 of the CCWG Report (prohibition of regulation of content) as a prohibition use of its contracts with registries and registrars to regulate content. This does not fully implement our Report. Please ensure that ICANN is prohibited from regulating content through any mechanism, not only through registry and registrar contracts. Furthermore, please exclude express this as an exclusion from the Mission, not merely a bare prohibition on certain actions, so that activities that would otherwise be permitted to ICANN can be challenged if they are designed to achieve this prohibited purpose."
I hesitate to offer alternative wording: the lawyers may wish to come up with their own, and we should let them. But I will offer these observations and a brief suggestion.
1. I understand that the lawyers wished to avoid use of the word regulation. Fine. 2. When moving away from the word regulation, they also moved away from describing a class of activity (regulation) to a specific action (using X contract in Y way). I think this is where they went wrong. This in itself limits the scope of the restriction. 3. Sticking as closely as possible to the text of the Report that Chartering Organisations have approved would seem advisable. So if they want to avoid the word regulation, look for some synonym.
Thus compare our Report: "Clarify that ICANN’s Mission does not include the regulation of services that use the Domain Name System or the regulation of the content these services carry or provide."
with the implementation team's draft bylaw
"ICANN shall not use its contracts with registries and registrars to impose terms and conditions that exceed the scope of ICANN’s Mission on services that use the Internet’s unique identifiers or the content that such services carry or provide."
and my alternative suggestion for this Bylaw
"ICANN's Mission does not include seeking to constrain or impose requirements upon the services the use the Domain Name System, nor seeking to constrain the content that those services carry or provide".
That would follow the Report as closely as possible, preserve the restriction as a limit on ICANN's Mission as intended, and still achieve the lawyers' goal of avoiding the word "regulate".
Kind Regards,
Malcolm.
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