RE: An idea to progress work on PDP
Hello Marilyn, At this stage I don't want to work on changing the bylaws of the PDP itself at this stage. However it would be a productive discussion to discuss the PDP in the context of working with the ccNSO on Internationalised domain names. Likewise, for the purposes of the Council improving the effectiveness of the PDP and following up on recommendations of the previous review - I recommend we start with the new gtld PDP - and make sure we plan the work carefully and get the Board to approve timelines that are outside of the PDP. If we are able to effectively design a process around IDNs and new gtlds, and prove that it works - lets then incorporate the process that works into the bylaws. I am reluctant to just work on the bylaws - when we don't have a working model that everyone has confidence in. Regarding the upcoming review - I agree that we should not review the whole PDP again. Instead we should focus on the elements of the PDP that were not covered in the last review. The last review focussed on the operation of the Council and its task forces. It did not cover the detail of how constituencies interact with the PDP - ie how constituencies develop their initial positions, and how constituencies interact with the remaining PDP process (ie how they discuss initial and final reports etc). I suspect we might have two different categories of policy work: - when the initial constituency positions seem to suggest a clear supermajority position - then the task force/Council can rapidly converge on an initial report. - when the initial constituency positions are widely diverging - we might need to establish a process/forum with wider constituency member participation to attempt to seek a compromise (this may need to be done at a physical ICANN meeting). The work on deleted names seems to fit into the first category - whereas the WHOIS work probably fits in to the second category. When reading the PDP process in the bylaws - it seems to assume that a task force will rapidly converge on a supermajority position - this is not possible for many controversial issues. Regards, Bruce Tonkin
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Bruce Tonkin