Volker,

You have confused me.

Are you saying, for example, .HSBC (using Martin Sutton here!) launching as a dotBRAND might distribute names that might otherwise go in a Sunrise for trademark holders?

And if .HSBC switches to general availability down the road, those names will have been registered in circumvention of a Sunrise?

But if HSBC allows its customers use of their name (e.g., BBC.HSBC or Orange.HSBC) aren't they the proper registrants in any regime?

I am having a hard time finding the problem to be solved.

Help me understand.

Berard

On Apr 15, 2014 1:36 AM, Volker Greimann <vgreimann@key-Systems.net> wrote:
As obligatory Sunrise is the baby of the IPC and BC, I had expected them to pick up on this issue as well.

IIRC, if a dotBrand gives up exclusivity, it loses the dotBrand status and the benefits of the spec. If would have to allow all registrars to get accredited and execute a sunrise. However, at that time, the damage may have already been done as the delayed sunrise may have become a farce if the RO already registered to its name all names that would be eligible for sunrise prior to giving up exclusivity. It would be akin to something that ICANN has been denying to other applicants, such as geoTLDs, essentially allowing the registry an unlimited period of exclusivity to reserve domain names to itself and a select circle of affiliates and licensees before a sunrise would be applicable.

I am not opposing the spec as it stands today, but I am pointing out the loopholes that may lead to abuse.

Volker



Am 15.04.2014 09:01, schrieb Jonathan Robinson:

All,

 

Please see note below from Philip Sheppard.

 

Jonathan

 

From: BRG [mailto:philip@brandregistrygroup.org]
Sent: 14 April 2014 17:03
To: jonathan.robinson@iprota.com
Subject: GNSO Council discussion Spec 13

 

Jonathan,

I noted that Klaus on the Council list asked this question:

BTW: what happens if a brand gTLD decides down the road to give up exclusivity and become available for general use, at some point that might make perfect business sense.

 

As I cannot post to Council, perhaps you would do so for me.

 

Its a legitimate question and one also asked by ICANN legal staff.

The answer is in other provisions of Spec 13. In the circumstances described by Klaus, all of Spec 13 would immediately no longer apply, and the default RA would apply instead.

 

Philip

 

 

Philip Sheppard

Director General

Brand Registry Group

www.brandregistrygroup.org

Skype phsheppard