RE: ICANN accreditation of UDRP providers
Phil, I wanted to get your proposal onto the correct list, with a relevant title, and adding my support. The BC should make a statement on this, for the reasons you mention. I think your draft is a good first draft for further comment of members, as I've revised it below. If no members object, then it could be submitted by the comment deadline as a BC comment. Or it can be revised and submitted based upon any friendly amendments offered to it in the meanwhile. Thanks, Mike Mike Rodenbaugh RODENBAUGH LAW tel/fax: +1 (415) 738-8087 <http://rodenbaugh.com/> http://rodenbaugh.com From: Phil Corwin [mailto:pcorwin@butera-andrews.com] Sent: Thursday, October 14, 2010 7:55 AM To: Marilyn Cade; bcprivate Subject: RE: Informational: update from Oct. 12: Transcripts and MP3 recording update - 12 October /reminder that BC election for Councilor and V.Chair, Operations and Finance will open soon/ There is a pending request for comment regarding the application of the Arab Center for Domain Name Dispute Resolution (ACDR) to become a certified UDRP arbitration provider. ACDR is located in Amman, Jordan; The comment period closes on October 28th. The BC opposes approval of this application at this time on the grounds that no new UDRP providers should be accredited until ICANN implements a standard contract with all accredited providers or finds some other mechanism for establishing uniform rules and procedures and flexible means of delineating and enforcing arbitration provider responsibilities. It makes no sense to require that domains be registered or renewed via ICANN-accredited registrars who are under a standard contract (the RAA) but then provide that registrants can have domains transferred away through a process administered by an organization that has been granted this power by ICANN -- yet is under no contract that defines its practices and procedures, is not subject to any regular or standardized review by ICANN, and for which ICANN's only disciplinary tool is accreditation revocation (so extreme a sanction that it is unlikely to ever be used). The Business Constituency suggests that ICANN implement a contractual relationship that defines and constrains this grant of power, and provides flexible and effective enforcement mechanisms, because that delegated power can extinguish substantial monetary investment and goodwill in a domain. Granting this kind of power absent any restraints is not an accountable practice. We appear to be transitioning from a DNS that featured an effective duopoly of UDRP providers (WIPO and NAF) and in which all significant gTLDs were based in the developed world -- to one in which the majority of gTLDs and UDRP providers may well be headquartered in nontraditional jurisdictions. Business interests may well be investing substantial amounts in these new gTLDs, for both defensive and new branding purposes. In this type of environment it is even more important that a proliferating cast of UDRP providers be subject to uniform and enforceable responsibilities, as that is the only means of furthering the goal that UDRP decisions are consistent within and among UDRP providers, and that the UDRP remains an expedited and lower cost means of addressing cybersquatting. In closing, we note that this issue of whether UDRP providers should be under standard contract with ICANN is almost entirely separable from the question of whether the UDRP evaluation standards for determining the existence of cybersquatting should be reformed. There is no need to debate the substantive elements of the UDRP in order to address the fundamental issue of whether UDRP providers should be under standardized contract. Regards to all, Philip 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: Marilyn Cade [marilynscade@hotmail.com] Sent: Wednesday, October 13, 2010 9:07 AM To: bcprivate Subject: Informational: update from Oct. 12: Transcripts and MP3 recording update - 12 October /reminder that BC election for Councilor and V.Chair, Operations and Finance will open soon/ Thanks again to all BC members for your participation in the full series of sessions and events October 12. Yesterday's meetings were a combination of CSG working session; informational roundtables with special guests, including ICANN, and a BC members policy forum/meeting. The purpose of this email is to provide a brief and very high level update from yesterday's meeting on a few of those items. A more detailed "next steps" summary is under development by the officers and others who took work item assignments and should be sent out by Monday. You should also expect to receive the PPs from the speakers as they are gathered. It will be a busy time between now and Cartegena. We will try to manage the email notices to you by having clear subject headings, so that you know whether an email requires action, or is for information/action, or is informational only. This email is informational. To recap: CSG Charter drafting will continue and draft will be circulated. A vote by members on a final draft will be scheduled for November, to meet a Board deadline. Sarah Deutsch is the lead as our CSG rep. A small drafting group supports her from BC: Marilyn Cade, Ron Andruff and Philip Sheppard. Other members are from the other two CSG constituencies. During the call, members did discuss other ways to improve communications [discussion of a more formalized 'newsletter style approach] and move to a more frequent members calls. Steve Delbianco, our V.Chair, Policy Coordination, will be advising on a priorty topical approach for the policy topics for monthly members calls. We also discussed launching a few 'working group' approaches on key issues, where the BC can provide strategic leadership. Stay tuned for more news on that front. We discussed a newsletter approach, and other changes in communications support tools; heard an update on finances, and membership; discussed other administrative functions updates, including announcing the Finance Committee members: Jon Nevett and Anders Halverson, and heard a report on options to manage the banking account and administrative support. Outcomes will be summarized in thee follow up report. Other actions that need your involvement will be announced shortly, including opening our elections for Councilor - 2 year term and V.Chair, Operations and Finance -- completion of term for this year. We will have separate working sessions on Charter development. The present small group of volunteers for working further on the BC Charter are Marilyn Cade, Chris Chaplow, Steve DelBianco, Sarah Deutsch, Philip Sheppard, Ron Andruff, and Mikey O'Connor. As we have worked with the Charter, we have identified some gaps that need addressing, along with changes coming from GNSO Improvements recommendations. A staff developed topical outline was presented on our call and we will continue to utilize staff support and consultation to advance further drafting/discussions re both the CSG charter and BC Charter. If anyone else wants to join this small working group, please so advise off list to Sarah Deutsch and myself by email. A couple of working calls will be scheduled over the next weeks to get a draft document with the proposed edits/clarifications. In the meantime, I will continue to provide the MP3 and transcripts from Oct. 12 as they arrive. there are three MP3s from yesterday's call. CSG charter discussion Roundtables/Dialogue with Kurt Pritz, ICANN BC Members Forum/Meeting Summary of distribution of MP3 and Transcripts: MP3 sent on Oct. 12. . This email includes the CSG Transcript. The Roundtables MP3 has not yet been received, however, I do have the BC call/MP3. Transcripts for both these sessions will be available much later today, or tomorrow and will be posted then. http://audio.icann.org/gnso/gnso-bc-20101012-en.mp3 Apologies for any gaps due to acoustical challenges in capturing particular speakers, but they are still a very good resource to all. The PowerPoints from the second Roundtable, Kurt Pritz discussion, and the BC officers and ICANN staff Charter overview will be posted separately. Special thanks to ICANN for supporting the remote participation and providing ICANN staff and the Chair of the SSAC [and ICANN Board member] Steve Crocker have been extended.
This draft comment is being circulated today (14-Oct) so that BC members will have 14 days to review, revise, and consider approval before the ICANN deadline of 28-Oct-2010. The attached comment was drafted by Phil Corwin and was polished for submission by Mike Rodenbaugh. Phil’s original note is shown at the bottom of this email, and contains some contextual material that may be helpful in your consideration of this draft. This draft comment is in response to ICANN’s proposal to recognize a new domain name dispute provider. For background on this proposal, see below, or at http://icann.org/en/public-comment/#acdr-proposal Explanation/Background: ICANN has received a proposal from the Arab Center for Domain Name Dispute Resolution (ACDR) to be recognized as one of the official dispute resolution providers under the UDRP. The proposal was submitted pursuant to the process specified at http://www.icann.org/en/dndr/udrp/provider-approval-process.htm. The ACDR is jointly established by the Arab Intellectual Property Mediation and Arbitration Society (AIPMAS) and the Arab Society for Intellectual Property (ASIP), with headquarters in Amman, Jordan and additional offices in other Arab Countries. Both the AIPMAS (established in 1987) and ASIP promote the activities of the Arab Center of Mediation and Arbitration, established in 2003, active in resolving conflicts related to intellectual property through international arbitrators. If approved, the ACDR would be the first Approved UDRP Dispute Resolution Service Provider headquartered in an Arab state. At its 5 August 2010 meeting, the Board approved staff’s recommendation to publish the ACDR proposal for a public comment for a period of not less than 30 days. Upon completion of the public comment period, ICANN staff will analyze the comments received and evaluate further recommendations to the Board on proceeding with the ACDR proposal. The proposal and relevant annexures are at: ACDR Proposal [PDF, 156 KB] Annex 1 – ACDR Initial List of Panelists [PDF, 176 KB] Annex 2 – ACDR Screening Process [PDF, 8 KB] Annex 3 – ACDR Supplemental Rules [PDF, 100 KB] ----- Forwarded Message From: Phil Corwin <pcorwin@butera-andrews.com> Date: Thu, 14 Oct 2010 14:54:47 +0000 To: Marilyn Cade <marilynscade@hotmail.com>, bcprivate <bcprivate@bizconst.org> Thanks to you, Steve, Sarah, Ron, Mikey, Chris and everyone else who put in place and participated in Tuesday's meeting of the Business Constituency. It was very worthwhile and hopefully will be an annual event. During the policy portion of the meeting I noted that there is a pending request for comment regarding the application of the Arab Center for Domain Name Dispute Resolution (ACDR) to become a certified UDRP arbitration provider. ACDR is located in Amman, Jordan; The comment period closes on October 28th. Steve invited me to provide further details, and this e-mail takes up that offer. I don't yet have an ICA comment letter to share that has been approved by the ICA Board, but I can provide this background -- I noted that the ICA intended to oppose approval of this application at this time on the grounds that no new UDRP providers should be accredited until ICANN implements a standard contract with all accredited providers or finds some other mechanism for establishing uniform rules and procedures and flexible means of delineating and enforcing arbitration provider responsibilities. Let me make clear that ICA's opposition will not be based in any way on the fact that this particular applicant is "Arab" and is located in the developing world. There were recent reports that an Indian organization is contemplating a similar application, and it may yet do so -- and ICA would take the same position in regard to them -- as we would in regard to any applicant from the US, EU, or any other part of the developed world. Nor are we necessarily alleging that ACDR or its proposed panelists are lacking adequate professional credentials (we are still reviewing all of their supporting documents). That said, future UDRP providers are likely to be located in jurisdictions that have different local legal cultures, and this make it even more important to have a standardized governing document to keep the "uniform" in UDRP. The problem is this -- it makes absolutely no sense to require that domains be registered or renewed via ICANN-accredited registrars who are under a standard contract (the RAA) but then provide that you can have your domain transferred away through a process administered by an organization that has been granted this power by ICANN -- yet is under no contract that defines its practices and procedures, is not subject to any regular or standardized review by ICANN, and for which ICANN's only disciplinary tool is accreditation revocation (so extreme a sanction that it is unlikely to ever be used). I would think that everyone in the Business Constituency would understand the importance of a contractual relationship that defines and constrains this grant of power, and provides flexible and effective enforcement mechanisms, because that delegated power can extinguish substantial monetary investment and goodwill in a domain. Granting this kind of power absent any restraints is not an accountable practice. As I noted yesterday, this is not just a domain investor/developer issue. We appear to be transitioning from a DNS that featured an effective duopoly of UDRP providers (WIPO and NAF) and in which all significant gTLDs were based in the developed world -- to one in which the majority of gTLDs may well be headquartered in nontraditional jurisdictions. Business interests may well be investing substantial amounts in these new gTLDs, for both defensive and new branding purposes. In this type of environment it is even more important that a proliferating cast of UDRP providers be subject to uniform and enforceable responsibilities, as that is the only means of assuring that UDRP decisions are consistent within and among UDRP providers, and that the UDRP remains an expedited and lower cost means of addressing cybersquatting. Let me conclude by noting that this issue of whether UDRP providers should be under standard contract with ICANN is almost entirely separable from the question of whether the UDRP evaluation standards for determining the existence of cybersquatting should be reformed. That latter issue is a more complicated matter, and ICA recently suggested to ICANN that it should undertake an expert and impartial study contrasting trends in Internet trademark law decisions in major jurisdictions with trends in UDRP practice in order to provide a common foundation of information to inform any broader UDRP reform effort. There is no need to debate the substantive elements of the UDRP in order to address the fundamental issue of whether UDRP providers should be under standardized contract. I realize that it is difficult for the BC to reach consensus or act quickly. But I would ask fellow members to start thinking about this issue of whether you want expanded ranks of UDRP providers to be able to decide disputes involving your domains registered in hundreds of new gTLDs located in multiple national jurisdictions without being under contract in that role. If the BC is unable to oppose this particular application I would at least hope we could achieve a consensus statement expressing concern about the lack of a contractual relationship between these providers and ICANN. Thanks to my fellow members for taking this under advisement -- and thanks again to all who contributed to yesterday's event. Regards to all, Philip Philip S. Corwin Partner Butera & Andrews Washington, DC 20004 202-347-6875 (office) 202-347-6876 (fax) 202-255-6172 (cell)
These comments are offered as a member of the BC, in my private capacity. First, I think that we need to continue to develop our BC comments in a positive tone, with a consistent 'look and feel', and with a view to leadership. Secondly, I provided some suggestions to the authors. However, I am not wedded to my language, but I am wedded to supporting that the BC's comments should show leadership.I know that was the intent, and hope that my suggestions might contribute to that approach. It is great to see such rapid turn around to get something out to members for consideration. Thanks, Phil, and Steve. I do have a question. Would you expect to freeze the document at some point, so that mmbers can respond to a final version? Marilyn Cade From: sdelbianco@netchoice.org To: bc-gnso@icann.org Subject: [bc-gnso] For review / approval by 28-Oct: BC Comment on Accreditation of UDRP providers Date: Fri, 15 Oct 2010 02:03:00 +0000 Message body This draft comment is being circulated today (14-Oct) so that BC members will have 14 days to review, revise, and consider approval before the ICANN deadline of 28-Oct-2010. The attached comment was drafted by Phil Corwin and was polished for submission by Mike Rodenbaugh. Phil’s original note is shown at the bottom of this email, and contains some contextual material that may be helpful in your consideration of this draft. This draft comment is in response to ICANN’s proposal to recognize a new domain name dispute provider. For background on this proposal, see below, or at http://icann.org/en/public-comment/#acdr-proposal Explanation/Background: ICANN has received a proposal from the Arab Center for Domain Name Dispute Resolution (ACDR) to be recognized as one of the official dispute resolution providers under the UDRP. The proposal was submitted pursuant to the process specified at http://www.icann.org/en/dndr/udrp/provider-approval-process.htm. The ACDR is jointly established by the Arab Intellectual Property Mediation and Arbitration Society (AIPMAS) and the Arab Society for Intellectual Property (ASIP), with headquarters in Amman, Jordan and additional offices in other Arab Countries. Both the AIPMAS (established in 1987) and ASIP promote the activities of the Arab Center of Mediation and Arbitration, established in 2003, active in resolving conflicts related to intellectual property through international arbitrators. If approved, the ACDR would be the first Approved UDRP Dispute Resolution Service Provider headquartered in an Arab state. At its 5 August 2010 meeting, the Board approved staff’s recommendation to publish the ACDR proposal for a public comment for a period of not less than 30 days. Upon completion of the public comment period, ICANN staff will analyze the comments received and evaluate further recommendations to the Board on proceeding with the ACDR proposal. The proposal and relevant annexures are at: ACDR Proposal [PDF, 156 KB] Annex 1 – ACDR Initial List of Panelists [PDF, 176 KB] Annex 2 – ACDR Screening Process [PDF, 8 KB] Annex 3 – ACDR Supplemental Rules [PDF, 100 KB] ----- Forwarded Message From: Phil Corwin <pcorwin@butera-andrews.com> Date: Thu, 14 Oct 2010 14:54:47 +0000 To: Marilyn Cade <marilynscade@hotmail.com>, bcprivate <bcprivate@bizconst.org> Thanks to you, Steve, Sarah, Ron, Mikey, Chris and everyone else who put in place and participated in Tuesday's meeting of the Business Constituency. It was very worthwhile and hopefully will be an annual event. During the policy portion of the meeting I noted that there is a pending request for comment regarding the application of the Arab Center for Domain Name Dispute Resolution (ACDR) to become a certified UDRP arbitration provider. ACDR is located in Amman, Jordan; The comment period closes on October 28th. Steve invited me to provide further details, and this e-mail takes up that offer. I don't yet have an ICA comment letter to share that has been approved by the ICA Board, but I can provide this background -- I noted that the ICA intended to oppose approval of this application at this time on the grounds that no new UDRP providers should be accredited until ICANN implements a standard contract with all accredited providers or finds some other mechanism for establishing uniform rules and procedures and flexible means of delineating and enforcing arbitration provider responsibilities. Let me make clear that ICA's opposition will not be based in any way on the fact that this particular applicant is "Arab" and is located in the developing world. There were recent reports that an Indian organization is contemplating a similar application, and it may yet do so -- and ICA would take the same position in regard to them -- as we would in regard to any applicant from the US, EU, or any other part of the developed world. Nor are we necessarily alleging that ACDR or its proposed panelists are lacking adequate professional credentials (we are still reviewing all of their supporting documents). That said, future UDRP providers are likely to be located in jurisdictions that have different local legal cultures, and this make it even more important to have a standardized governing document to keep the "uniform" in UDRP. The problem is this -- it makes absolutely no sense to require that domains be registered or renewed via ICANN-accredited registrars who are under a standard contract (the RAA) but then provide that you can have your domain transferred away through a process administered by an organization that has been granted this power by ICANN -- yet is under no contract that defines its practices and procedures, is not subject to any regular or standardized review by ICANN, and for which ICANN's only disciplinary tool is accreditation revocation (so extreme a sanction that it is unlikely to ever be used). I would think that everyone in the Business Constituency would understand the importance of a contractual relationship that defines and constrains this grant of power, and provides flexible and effective enforcement mechanisms, because that delegated power can extinguish substantial monetary investment and goodwill in a domain. Granting this kind of power absent any restraints is not an accountable practice. As I noted yesterday, this is not just a domain investor/developer issue. We appear to be transitioning from a DNS that featured an effective duopoly of UDRP providers (WIPO and NAF) and in which all significant gTLDs were based in the developed world -- to one in which the majority of gTLDs may well be headquartered in nontraditional jurisdictions. Business interests may well be investing substantial amounts in these new gTLDs, for both defensive and new branding purposes. In this type of environment it is even more important that a proliferating cast of UDRP providers be subject to uniform and enforceable responsibilities, as that is the only means of assuring that UDRP decisions are consistent within and among UDRP providers, and that the UDRP remains an expedited and lower cost means of addressing cybersquatting. Let me conclude by noting that this issue of whether UDRP providers should be under standard contract with ICANN is almost entirely separable from the question of whether the UDRP evaluation standards for determining the existence of cybersquatting should be reformed. That latter issue is a more complicated matter, and ICA recently suggested to ICANN that it should undertake an expert and impartial study contrasting trends in Internet trademark law decisions in major jurisdictions with trends in UDRP practice in order to provide a common foundation of information to inform any broader UDRP reform effort. There is no need to debate the substantive elements of the UDRP in order to address the fundamental issue of whether UDRP providers should be under standardized contract. I realize that it is difficult for the BC to reach consensus or act quickly. But I would ask fellow members to start thinking about this issue of whether you want expanded ranks of UDRP providers to be able to decide disputes involving your domains registered in hundreds of new gTLDs located in multiple national jurisdictions without being under contract in that role. If the BC is unable to oppose this particular application I would at least hope we could achieve a consensus statement expressing concern about the lack of a contractual relationship between these providers and ICANN. Thanks to my fellow members for taking this under advisement -- and thanks again to all who contributed to yesterday's event. Regards to all, Philip Philip S. Corwin Partner Butera & Andrews Washington, DC 20004 202-347-6875 (office) 202-347-6876 (fax) 202-255-6172 (cell)
Our rapporteur Phil Corwin has done a masterful job responding to edits and comments from several BC members over the past week. Attached is Phil’s ‘final’ version. According to our Charter, “ If no substantively opposing comments are received the position will be deemed approved.” So please use the remaining 6 days in our review period to register any substantive opposition to the BC filing these comments with ICANN on 28-Oct. Thanks again to Phil and to all the members who contributed to this effort. --Steve On 10/14/10 10:03 PM, "Steve DelBianco" <sdelbianco@netchoice.org> wrote: This draft comment is being circulated today (14-Oct) so that BC members will have 14 days to review, revise, and consider approval before the ICANN deadline of 28-Oct-2010. The attached comment was drafted by Phil Corwin and was polished for submission by Mike Rodenbaugh. Phil’s original note is shown at the bottom of this email, and contains some contextual material that may be helpful in your consideration of this draft. This draft comment is in response to ICANN’s proposal to recognize a new domain name dispute provider. For background on this proposal, see below, or at http://icann.org/en/public-comment/#acdr-proposal Explanation/Background: ICANN has received a proposal from the Arab Center for Domain Name Dispute Resolution (ACDR) to be recognized as one of the official dispute resolution providers under the UDRP. The proposal was submitted pursuant to the process specified at http://www.icann.org/en/dndr/udrp/provider-approval-process.htm. The ACDR is jointly established by the Arab Intellectual Property Mediation and Arbitration Society (AIPMAS) and the Arab Society for Intellectual Property (ASIP), with headquarters in Amman, Jordan and additional offices in other Arab Countries. Both the AIPMAS (established in 1987) and ASIP promote the activities of the Arab Center of Mediation and Arbitration, established in 2003, active in resolving conflicts related to intellectual property through international arbitrators. If approved, the ACDR would be the first Approved UDRP Dispute Resolution Service Provider headquartered in an Arab state. At its 5 August 2010 meeting, the Board approved staff’s recommendation to publish the ACDR proposal for a public comment for a period of not less than 30 days. Upon completion of the public comment period, ICANN staff will analyze the comments received and evaluate further recommendations to the Board on proceeding with the ACDR proposal. The proposal and relevant annexures are at: ACDR Proposal [PDF, 156 KB] Annex 1 – ACDR Initial List of Panelists [PDF, 176 KB] Annex 2 – ACDR Screening Process [PDF, 8 KB] Annex 3 – ACDR Supplemental Rules [PDF, 100 KB]
speaking in my personal capacity, I support this position. And thanks to Phil as rapporteur on this topic. Steve, Phil: great job in getting a topic launched; position drafted/posted; taking comments, incorporating dissent and changes, and getting a final version! Marilyn From: sdelbianco@netchoice.org To: bc-gnso@icann.org Subject: [bc-gnso] For FINAL approval by 28-Oct: BC Comment on Accreditation of UDRP providers Date: Sat, 23 Oct 2010 02:17:19 +0000 Message body Our rapporteur Phil Corwin has done a masterful job responding to edits and comments from several BC members over the past week. Attached is Phil’s ‘final’ version. According to our Charter, “ If no substantively opposing comments are received the position will be deemed approved.” So please use the remaining 6 days in our review period to register any substantive opposition to the BC filing these comments with ICANN on 28-Oct. Thanks again to Phil and to all the members who contributed to this effort. --Steve On 10/14/10 10:03 PM, "Steve DelBianco" <sdelbianco@netchoice.org> wrote: This draft comment is being circulated today (14-Oct) so that BC members will have 14 days to review, revise, and consider approval before the ICANN deadline of 28-Oct-2010. The attached comment was drafted by Phil Corwin and was polished for submission by Mike Rodenbaugh. Phil’s original note is shown at the bottom of this email, and contains some contextual material that may be helpful in your consideration of this draft. This draft comment is in response to ICANN’s proposal to recognize a new domain name dispute provider. For background on this proposal, see below, or at http://icann.org/en/public-comment/#acdr-proposal Explanation/Background: ICANN has received a proposal from the Arab Center for Domain Name Dispute Resolution (ACDR) to be recognized as one of the official dispute resolution providers under the UDRP. The proposal was submitted pursuant to the process specified at http://www.icann.org/en/dndr/udrp/provider-approval-process.htm. The ACDR is jointly established by the Arab Intellectual Property Mediation and Arbitration Society (AIPMAS) and the Arab Society for Intellectual Property (ASIP), with headquarters in Amman, Jordan and additional offices in other Arab Countries. Both the AIPMAS (established in 1987) and ASIP promote the activities of the Arab Center of Mediation and Arbitration, established in 2003, active in resolving conflicts related to intellectual property through international arbitrators. If approved, the ACDR would be the first Approved UDRP Dispute Resolution Service Provider headquartered in an Arab state. At its 5 August 2010 meeting, the Board approved staff’s recommendation to publish the ACDR proposal for a public comment for a period of not less than 30 days. Upon completion of the public comment period, ICANN staff will analyze the comments received and evaluate further recommendations to the Board on proceeding with the ACDR proposal. The proposal and relevant annexures are at: ACDR Proposal [PDF, 156 KB] Annex 1 – ACDR Initial List of Panelists [PDF, 176 KB] Annex 2 – ACDR Screening Process [PDF, 8 KB] Annex 3 – ACDR Supplemental Rules [PDF, 100 KB]
Much appreciated, Marilyn, and thanks as well to Steve 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: owner-bc-gnso@icann.org [owner-bc-gnso@icann.org] on behalf of Marilyn Cade [marilynscade@hotmail.com] Sent: Friday, October 22, 2010 11:37 PM To: Steve Delbianco; bc - GNSO list Subject: RE: [bc-gnso] For FINAL approval by 28-Oct: BC Comment on Accreditation of UDRP providers speaking in my personal capacity, I support this position. And thanks to Phil as rapporteur on this topic. Steve, Phil: great job in getting a topic launched; position drafted/posted; taking comments, incorporating dissent and changes, and getting a final version! Marilyn ________________________________ From: sdelbianco@netchoice.org To: bc-gnso@icann.org Subject: [bc-gnso] For FINAL approval by 28-Oct: BC Comment on Accreditation of UDRP providers Date: Sat, 23 Oct 2010 02:17:19 +0000 Our rapporteur Phil Corwin has done a masterful job responding to edits and comments from several BC members over the past week. Attached is Phil’s ‘final’ version. According to our Charter, “ If no substantively opposing comments are received the position will be deemed approved.” So please use the remaining 6 days in our review period to register any substantive opposition to the BC filing these comments with ICANN on 28-Oct. Thanks again to Phil and to all the members who contributed to this effort. --Steve On 10/14/10 10:03 PM, "Steve DelBianco" <sdelbianco@netchoice.org<http://sdelbianco@netchoice.org>> wrote: This draft comment is being circulated today (14-Oct) so that BC members will have 14 days to review, revise, and consider approval before the ICANN deadline of 28-Oct-2010. The attached comment was drafted by Phil Corwin and was polished for submission by Mike Rodenbaugh. Phil’s original note is shown at the bottom of this email, and contains some contextual material that may be helpful in your consideration of this draft. This draft comment is in response to ICANN’s proposal to recognize a new domain name dispute provider. For background on this proposal, see below, or at http://icann.org/en/public-comment/#acdr-proposal Explanation/Background: ICANN has received a proposal from the Arab Center for Domain Name Dispute Resolution (ACDR) to be recognized as one of the official dispute resolution providers under the UDRP. The proposal was submitted pursuant to the process specified at http://www.icann.org/en/dndr/udrp/provider-approval-process.htm. The ACDR is jointly established by the Arab Intellectual Property Mediation and Arbitration Society (AIPMAS) and the Arab Society for Intellectual Property (ASIP), with headquarters in Amman, Jordan and additional offices in other Arab Countries. Both the AIPMAS (established in 1987) and ASIP promote the activities of the Arab Center of Mediation and Arbitration, established in 2003, active in resolving conflicts related to intellectual property through international arbitrators. If approved, the ACDR would be the first Approved UDRP Dispute Resolution Service Provider headquartered in an Arab state. At its 5 August 2010 meeting, the Board approved staff’s recommendation to publish the ACDR proposal for a public comment for a period of not less than 30 days. Upon completion of the public comment period, ICANN staff will analyze the comments received and evaluate further recommendations to the Board on proceeding with the ACDR proposal. The proposal and relevant annexures are at: ACDR Proposal [PDF, 156 KB] Annex 1 – ACDR Initial List of Panelists [PDF, 176 KB] Annex 2 – ACDR Screening Process [PDF, 8 KB] Annex 3 – ACDR Supplemental Rules [PDF, 100 KB]
AIM supports such a statement. Philip
participants (5)
-
Marilyn Cade -
Mike Rodenbaugh -
Phil Corwin -
Philip Sheppard -
Steve DelBianco