I differ with Evan here in a few small but critical ways. I see a continuing role for ALS within the At-Large context. This aside, I have always supported the inclusion of individuals in the At-Large membership structure because I fully recognize that even as an ALS provides an institutional framework for aggregating lots of users and their views, it is the individual who turns up ready for work in review teams and PDPs.
From where I sit, I support reviews of all kinds, operational and structural. I have personally participated in them and their charters considered, strongly support them in exercise and intent. Given the opportunity for a continuing engagement of the review team in implementation, I'm even more hopeful that the opportunity to valorize work is possible.
I tend to subscribe to the view that results do matter. And for them to continue so to do, reflection is always important for effective organisation and governance. There is another added personal value to participating in reviews; is the surest way for one to get a deep understanding of what matters in ICANN. -Carlton ============================== *Carlton A Samuels* *Mobile: 876-818-1799Strategy, Process, Governance, Assessment & Turnaround* ============================= On Mon, Dec 10, 2018 at 7:28 AM Evan Leibovitch <evanleibovitch@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Christian,
Given my experiences and observations... While I have totally stayed away from the last At-Large review, I did one myself as a personal mental exercise.
The conclusion I came to is that the current structure underneath ALAC is overly politicized, appeals to superficial airs of importance, and is at its core designed to be utterly impotent in regard to serving its bylaw mandate.
Were I to be engaged in a real exercise to enable ALAC to serve its bylaw mandate, I would wish to eliminate ALSs and move to fully individual membership in RALOs. I would reduce travel and invest more in vitual meeting technologies. I would also concentrate ALAC activity in ONLY three areas:
- Creation and distribution of plain language public education on the DNS and how it affects public use of the internet (written independently of ICANN itself)
- surveys and R&D into public needs and opinions about domain names and the DNS
- analysis of the result of such research, and development of ICANN input based on that (both in original policy initiatives and response to existing activity)
Any takers? I'm happy to engage if any interest exists. My rationale behind this is quite deep and I'm happy to expand if interest exists. ___________________ Evan Leibovitch, Toronto @evanleibovitch/@el56
On Mon, Dec 10, 2018, 11:45 AM Christian de Larrinaga <cdel@firsthand.net wrote:
Given the clarity of these two comments. Maybe it is time to consider a straw poll over what future role and activity At Large participants feel is viable? Given the experience of the continuous perilous undermining of the Internet edge by every digital miner with a pickaxe, shovel or stick of dynamite?
Christian
Carlton Samuels wrote:
Yessir, I can recall your exact words to me so long ago; waste of time, decision already made. The reasoning you offered was bold, too.
I was interested at one point. Then when it was too clearly a bridge too far, I retired to the shadows.
A congressman from Texas once told a writer I truly loved that in politics you have no right to call yourself a politician if you cant drink their whiskey, take their women and money and still vote against them. Theres a lesson there somewhere.
The arguments you hear on this or that are stimulating for a policy wonk. But quite frankly at this point much of what the At-Large does is margin-gathering.
Someone has to. And we live in hope.
-Carlton
On Mon, 10 Dec 2018, 1:07 am Evan Leibovitch <evanleibovitch@gmail.com <mailto:evanleibovitch@gmail.com> wrote:
So... Do all of you who sank your valuable time into that where-do-the-auction-funds-go sham of a process feel a little betrayed now?
How many more times will we continue to play this futile game?
The fix is always in. Let the "community" thrash about with well-meaning but big-picture-pointless debate, then swoop in at the end to remind where the ultimate decision lies. It lies with the money.
"Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me."
I got fooled enough with the Applicant Support process, the CCT and a few others. Yeah, it's more than one but at least I can say I know the experience intimately. But the aftermath of these efforts (or lack thereof) is why you don't see me wasting my time on subsequent ones. (Cue the theme music from "CSI:Miami".)
Countless of my colleagues continue the good-faith attempt to disprove Einstein's definition of insanity(*), unsuccessfully. I love my ALAC friends (I've literally invited you to my home) and it pains me to watch the story repeat so often.
But sooner or later the collective massochism and denial has to end. Turnover in ALAC is low enough to have plenty of veterans around who should know better.
Stop playing the game. Challenge the rules instead. Perfect example: why is ALAC involved in the minutiae of "subsequent procedures" for new rounds of gTLDs without having even challenged the rationale for new rounds at all? Also, I've previously spoken at length about ALAC's sad longtime choice to respond to the agendas of others rather than even try to set its own.
Monied interests overpower us politically by orders of magnitude, and without a regulatory role ICANN has no incentive to push against the money. This needs to be changed, or others will change it from the outside.
I remind that we are now living through a period of time in which awful political choices are being made, all over the world, in desperate moves to disrupt deaf and corrupt status quo. ICANN and ALAC ignore this trend at their danger.
___________________ Evan Leibovitch, Toronto @evanleibovitch/@el56
(*) that may not have ever actually been said by Einstein, but it's a useful phrase regardless of source.
On Dec 9, 2018 12:34 AM, "Carlton Samuels" <carlton.samuels@gmail.com <mailto:carlton.samuels@gmail.com>> wrote:
https://www.theregister.co.uk/2018/12/07/dot_web_review/
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