Dear SO/AC Chair - Dear Byron,
As you may be aware, the GNSO Council recently initiated a Policy Development Process (PDP) on Privacy & Proxy Services Accreditation Issues. As part of its efforts to obtain input from the broader ICANN Community at an early stage of its
deliberations, the Working Group that has begun to explore questions related to these issues is looking for any input or information that may help inform our deliberations.
Below you will find an overview of the issues that the WG has been assigned to address in its charter. We would appreciate it very much if you would examine the items and provide any input that your group may have to the GNSO Secretariat
(gnso.secretariat@gnso.icann.org) by Friday 28 February 2014. If you cannot submit
your input by that date, but your group would like to contribute, please let us know when we can expect to receive your contribution so that we can plan accordingly. While we would like your thoughts on all items, responses to a subset still will be helpful.
Please feel free also to suggest modifications to or additional questions that your group believes useful for the WG to address.
Your input will be valuable for informing the WG as we begin our work. We have included a list of relevant definitions at the end of this document in the hope that they will be of assistance to your group in providing input. For further background
information on our WG’s activities to date and to follow our work as we move forward, see https://community.icann.org/x/9iCfAg.
With best regards,
Don Blumenthal, Chair of the Privacy & Proxy Services Accreditation Issues PDP Working Group
QUESTIONS FOR WHICH THE WG WAS CHARTERED AND IS SEEKING INPUT
This RAA PDP Working Group (WG) was created to provide the GNSO Council with policy recommendations
regarding the issues identified during the 2013 RAA negotiations, including recommendations made by law enforcement and GNSO working groups,that were not addressed during
the 2013 RAA negotiations but
are otherwise suited for a PDP.
These issues focus on theaccreditation of Privacy & Proxy Services.
As part of its deliberations on the matter, the RAA PDP WG was
asked to, at a minimum, consider those issues
detailed in the StaffBriefing Paper published on 16
September 2013 and included in the WG Charter (seehttps://community.icann.org/display/gnsopnpsrvaccrdtwg/WG+Charter).
The WG has organized the questions in the hope that it adds clarity.
I. MAIN ISSUES
1. What, if any, are the types of Standard Service Practices that should be adopted and published by ICANN-accredited
privacy/proxy service providers?
2. Should ICANN distinguish between privacy and proxy services for the purpose of the accreditation process?
3. What are the contractual obligations, if any, that if unfulfilled would justify termination of customer access by
ICANN-accredited privacy/proxy service providers?
4. What types of services should be covered, and would be the forms of non-compliance that would trigger cancellation
or suspension of registrations?
5. What are the effects of the privacy and proxy service specification contained in the 2013 RAA? Have these new requirements
improved WHOIS quality, registrant contactability and service usability?
6. What should be the contractual obligations of ICANN accredited registrars with regard to accredited privacy/proxy
service providers? Should registrars be permitted to knowingly accept registrations where the registrant is using unaccredited service providers that are however bound to the same standards as accredited service providers?
II. MAINTENANCE
1. Should ICANN-accredited privacy/proxy service providers be required to label WHOIS entries to clearly show when a
registration is made through a privacy/proxy service?
2. Should ICANN-accredited privacy/proxy service providers be required to conduct periodic checks to ensure accuracy
of customer contact information; and if so, how?
3. What rights and responsibilities should customers of privacy/proxy services have? What obligations should ICANN-accredited privacy/proxy service
providers have in managing these rights and responsibilities? Clarify how transfers, renewals, and PEDNR policies should apply.
4. Should ICANN-accredited privacy/proxy service providers distinguish between domain names used for commercial vs.
personal purposes? Specifically, is the use of privacy/proxy services appropriate when a domain name is registered for commercial purposes?
5. Should there be a difference in the data fields to be displayed if the domain name is registered or used for a commercial
purpose, or by a commercial entity instead of a natural person?
6. Should the use of privacy/proxy services be restricted only to registrants who are private individuals using the
domain name for non-commercial purposes?
III. CONTACT
1. What measures should be taken to ensure contactability and responsiveness of the providers?
2. Should ICANN-accredited privacy/proxy service providers be required to maintain dedicated points of contact for reporting
abuse? If so, should the terms be consistent with the requirements applicable to registrars under Section 3.18 of the RAA?
3. Should full WHOIS contact details for ICANN-accredited privacy/proxy service providers be required?
4. What are the forms of alleged malicious conduct, if any, that would be covered by a designated published point of
contact at an ICANN-accredited privacy/proxy service provider?
IV. RELAY
1. What, if any, are the baseline minimum standardized relay processes that should be adopted by ICANN-accredited privacy/proxy
service providers?
2. Should ICANN-accredited privacy/proxy service providers be required to forward to the customer all allegations of
illegal activities they receive relating to specific domain names of the customer?
V. REVEAL
1. What, if any, are the baseline minimum standardized reveal processes that should be adopted by ICANN-accredited privacy/proxy
service providers?
2. Should ICANN-accredited privacy/proxy service providers be required to reveal customer
identities for the specific purpose of ensuring timely service of cease and desist letters?
3. What forms of alleged malicious conduct, if any, and what evidentiary standard would be sufficient to trigger such
disclosure? What specific alleged violations, if any, would be sufficient to trigger such publication?
4. What safeguards must be put in place to ensure adequate protections for privacy and freedom of expression?
5. What safeguards or remedies should be available in cases where publication is found to have been unwarranted?
6. What circumstances, if any, would warrant access to registrant data by law enforcement agencies?
7. What clear, workable, enforceable and standardized processes should be adopted by ICANN-accredited privacy/proxy
services in order to regulate such access (if such access is warranted)?
LIST OF RELEVANT DEFINITIONS
(1) Privacy & Proxy Services
The following definitions are those used by the GNSO in the various WHOIS studies it commissioned between 2010-2012 (http://gnso.icann.org/issues/whois/whois-working-definitions-study-terms-18feb09.pdf):
ˇ Privacy services hide customer details from going into WHOIS. Privacy service
providers, which may include registrars and resellers, may offer alternate contact information and mail forwarding services while not actually shielding the domain name registrant’s identity. By shielding the user in these ways, these services are promoted
as a means of protecting personal privacy, free speech and human rights and avoiding personal data misuse.
ˇ Proxy services protect users’ privacy by having a third-party register the
name. The third-party is most often the proxy service itself. The third-party allows the user to access and use the domain name through a separate agreement or some other arrangement directly with the user. Proxy service providers may include web design, law,
and marketing firms; web hosts, registrar subsidiaries, resellers and individuals.
NOTE: The 2013 Registrar Accreditation Agreement contains a temporary specification relating to Privacy & Proxy Services, which refers to these services as follows (http://www.icann.org/en/resources/registrars/raa/approved-with-specs-27jun13-en.pdf):
1.1 "P/P Customer" means, regardless of the terminology used by the P/P Provider, the licensee, customer, beneficial user, beneficiary, or other recipient of Privacy Services and Proxy Services.
1.2 "Privacy Service" is a service by which a Registered Name is registered to its beneficial user as the Registered Name Holder, but for which alternative, reliable contact information is provided by the P/P Provider for display of the Registered
Name Holder's contact information in the Registration Data Service (Whois) or equivalent services.
1.3 "Proxy Service" is a service through which a Registered Name Holder licenses use of a Registered Name to the P/P Customer in order to provide the P/P Customer use of the domain name, and the Registered Name Holder's contact information
is displayed in the Registration Data Service (Whois) or equivalent services rather than the P/P Customer's contact information.
1.4 "P/P Provider" or "Service Provider" is the provider of Privacy/Proxy Services, including Registrar and its Affiliates, as applicable.
(2) Relay & Reveal Requests
The following descriptions are taken from the GNSO’s Terms of Reference for a proposed Proxy & Privacy Relay & Reveal Study in 2010 (http://gnso.icann.org/issues/whois/whois-proxy-privacy-relay-reveal-studies-tor-29sep10-en.pdf):
For many domains (including those registered via Privacy services), the Registered Name Holder's identity is published directly in WHOIS. However, for domains registered
via Proxy services, the name of the licensee is not published in WHOIS; third party licensees can typically only be identified by asking the Proxy to reveal the licensee's identity, given reasonable evidence of actionable harm.
Glen de Saint Géry
GNSO Secretariat
gnso.secretariat@gnso.icann.org