Dear colleagues,
Pursuant to the comments that have been
sent in, as rapporteur for this process, I have incorporated the amendments and
prepared two final documents for your review and comment. Two documents,
insomuch as I broke the original comments into two separate postings so that
the BC membership can work through the issues accordingly. As Philip
Sheppard noted, the BC must post its comments in line with past
positions. Splitting the documents hopefully enables focused discussion
on the RPM piece without impeding posting the other comments.
The first document incorporates a slimmed
down version of the original comments I posted last week on the issues of ‘market
differentiation’, ‘translation of ASCII to other scripts’ and
‘revised community priority evaluation scoring’, with the BC’s
DAGv3 comments attached for reference. It should be noted that I have
made no material changes in these comments; rather I simply tightened up
the arguments and cleaned up typos, etc.
The second document is effectively Jon’s
edits on RPMs. I have made no changes to his edition other than made the
correction (‘complainant’ vs. ‘registrant’) that Phil
Corwin noted in his recent posting to the list.
Once again, I welcome comments/amendments
to finalize these two documents for posting.
Kind regards,
RA
Ronald N. Andruff
President
RNA Partners, Inc.
220
+ 1 212 481 2820 ext. 11
From:
owner-bc-gnso@icann.org [mailto:owner-bc-gnso@icann.org] On Behalf Of Phil Corwin
Sent: Monday, July 19, 2010 10:39
AM
To: Jon Nevett; Zahid Jamil
Cc: 'Deutsch, Sarah B';
michaelc@traveler.com; mike@haven2.com; jb7454@att.com;
randruff@rnapartners.com; ffelman@markmonitor.com; bc-GNSO@icann.org
Subject: RE: Re[2]: [bc-gnso] DRAFT
BC Public Comments on DAGv4
ICA believes that John's redraft is
a significant improvement in many ways.
However, we do continue to have some
concerns about the URS section, specifically:
"An Examiner may find that Complaint contained a deliberate
material falsehood if it
contained
an assertion of fact, which at the time it was made, was made with the
knowledge
that it was false and which, if true, would have an impact on the outcome on
the
URS proceeding."
What this says is that if a complainant
deliberately lied about a material fact in order
to influence the outcome of a URS in its favor it will
suffer a penalty in order to protect the integrity of the overall process. The
penalty for one such deliberate lie is being suspended from using the URS for
one year; the penalty for two such lies is permanently barring it from use
of the process. Now, as a practical matter, it will be the rare case
where the examiner is able to conclude that the complainant deliberately misrepresented
material facts, so this isn't going to happen very often, plus there are no
monetary sanctions - including fines or a requirement that the complainant
pay the registrant's costs of defending the domain - so it isn't as severe
a pernalty as some called for it to be. If the BC is going to
say that the impact test is too low (with which we don't agree) then I think it
has some responsibility to propose an alternate tests that protects the
integrity of the URS against the (hopefully rare) complainant who
deliberately seeks to abuse it.
As a typographical matter, the last portion
of the last sentence of the first URS paragraph should read
"less certainty for the complainant using this
process", not "registrant".
Finally, we appreciate the serious and civil
debate that has been taking place within the BC on this matter -- this is
precisely what should occur within a constituency to bridge differences in
perspective.
Philip S. Corwin
Partner
Butera & Andrews
1301 Pennsylvania Ave., NW
Suite 500
Washington, DC 20004
202-347-6875
(office)
202-347-6876 (fax)
202-255-6172
(cell)
"Luck is the
residue of design." -- Branch Rickey
From: Jon Nevett
[jon@nevett.net]
Sent: Sunday, July 18, 2010 9:39
PM
To: Zahid Jamil
Cc: 'Deutsch, Sarah B'; Phil
Corwin; michaelc@traveler.com; mike@haven2.com; jb7454@att.com;
randruff@rnapartners.com; ffelman@markmonitor.com; bc-GNSO@icann.org
Subject: Re: Re[2]: [bc-gnso] DRAFT
BC Public Comments on DAGv4
Folks:
Attached is a suggested redraft to bridge
the gap. I personally don't agree with some of the arguments I left in
the attached, but I tried to keep the longstanding BC positions while toning
down the anti-TLD language. I also deleted a couple of the arguments that
were objected to in some of the notes I reviewed.
Here are some of the highlights:
*I deleted the GPML section.
*I deleted the clear and convincing
evidence issue with regard to the URS. As a member of the IRT, I can say
that it clearly was our intent for the URS to have a higher burden of proof
than the UDRP -- the legal standard is exactly the same. We wanted
the URS to be for "slam dunk" cases. The URS was to be a less
expensive alternative to the UDRP cognizant of the fact that 70% of UDRPs go
unanswered. Has this issue even been raised before by the BC?
*Based on Sarah's helpful e-mail, I left
alone the complaint about transferring names after a successful URS as that has
been an issue that Zahid, Mike and others in the BC have argued consistently.
I do note, however, that transfer was not in the IRT recommendation and
the STI agreed to add a year to the registration at the request of the
complainant as a compromise.
*Again based on Sarah's e-mail, I left the
PDDRP section pretty much alone except for an argument about registries
warehousing names, but not using them, as that argument didn't make much sense
to me. That's exactly the function of a registry to warehouse names until
they are sold by registrars. If a registry "reserves" a name
and it is not in use at all, the mark holder should be thrilled that it can't
be registered by a squatter.
*I also deleted the paragraph about the
Director of Compliance. I don't think it appropriate to comment on those
kinds of personnel matters.
*I didn't touch the arguments related to
community and 13 points (though I personally favor 14 points to avoid gaming --
sorry Ron), as that seems to be longstanding BC position.
*I didn't do much on the Market
Differentiation section either other than soften some of the language.
I have no idea if my attempt will get
consensus or not, but I thought it worthwhile to offer alternative language and
I tried hard to find a balance.
Thanks.
Jon