Dear Steve,

Thanks for starting this discussion.

Beyond the definition of public interest (differing views were expressed this was a purpose of our group, or even an achievable or desirable goal), your comment raises a question regarding for what Icann should be accountable to (the "purpose" of accountability).

Following your lines, we could assume that Icann might be accountable to achieve:
- availability of registrations and resolutions of the DNS (would that be totally ? or for the components it operates ?)
- Integrity of the DNS (same question ?)

This might be put into relation with the scope of Icann's mission to be refined.

In contrast (or in addition) Carl Schonander proposal to mention respect for international and national law would turn into Icann being accountable to compliance with international and national law. (and would raise the question: which national law ?)

Best
Mathieu

Le 16/12/2014 13:34, Steve DelBianco a écrit :
As mentioned on today’s call, here is a proposed definition for global public interest in the context of ICANN:

The 'public' part of public interest is concerned more with users and registrants than with contracted parties and others who are deeply involved at ICANN.  
And the public interest in ICANN decisions is broader than just a secure and stable DNS. Namely, users and registrants want ICANN to make sure the DNS delivers two essential and measurable qualities: Availability and Integrity, of Registrations and Resolutions

Availability of the DNS is critical for global users who increasingly rely on the Internet for information, communications, and commerce. Domain name resolutions need to be available 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, from anywhere on the globe. Availability also means being able to use any language and any script for both generic and country-code domains and email addresses.

Availability can also apply to domain names sought by registrants: will domains in new gTLDs be available to the public, or will they be captured by insiders? That kind of availability should also be part of the public interest test for ICANN decisions.

Integrity of the DNS is vital to registrants and end-users of the Internet. Registrants rely upon the integrity of domain name registration to ensure that their identities are not misrepresented or misappropriated.  E-commerce and Internet financial transactions absolutely require integrity in resolution of domain names and secure delivery of encrypted data.

Internet users depend upon the integrity of domain name services to provide accurate and authentic results when they look up a website or send an email. Integrity is undermined by deceptive practices such as redirecting users to fraudulent websites or providing false information about the true owner of a web domain.

I encourage further discussion on the concept of global public interest in our CCWG. This term is too important to leave undefined or let a few individuals define it to fit their own agenda.   If we allow 'public interest' to mean anything and everything, it will end up meaning nothing at all.

Steve DelBianco
Executive Director
NetChoice
+1.202.420.7482



On 12/16/14, 11:48 AM, "Bruce Tonkin" <Bruce.Tonkin@melbourneit.com.au> wrote:

Hello All,

The origin of the strategic work on public interest comes from the strategy panel on Public Responsibility Framework.

https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/prf-report-15may14-en.pdf  

That panel recommended the following definition:

"Panel Definitions Submitted to ICANN:

As an independent, global organization, ICANN is one of the organizations charged
with responsibility for an increasingly important shared global resource: The Internet.
As one of the stewards of this resource, ICANN recognizes it has a responsibility to
protect and promote the global public interest, both throughout its work, and in
collaboration with other entities. ICANN's public responsibility permeates all areas of
its work and is at the core of its operations.

ICANN defines the global public interest in relation to the Internet as ensuring the
Internet becomes, and continues to be, stable, inclusive, and accessible across the
globe so that all may enjoy the benefits of a single and open Internet. In addressing its
public responsibility, ICANN must build trust in the Internet and its governance
ecosystem."

This definition though has not been formally adopted.

Regards,
Bruce Tonkin

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