Hello all,
unfortunately, I am not 100% aligned on this and am rather more
cautious:
"...
imploring ALAC to concentrate its comments on those issues with
demonstrable effect on end users (abuse, confusion, stability,
etc)"
When I read this, I interpret is that
it considers the "end user" as being a simple, definable entity.
In reality, this is unfortunately not the case. End users have
different priorities depending on what country they are from and
the At-Large needs to tap input from every place on the planet,
not just the vocal ones whose interests are "abuse, confusion,
stability, etc."
Yes, there are many end users in the world, and no doubt in our
community, that have these very concerns as a priority. But there
are also many others who have both a different political outlook,
but also priorities and understanding of the world. Consider the
importance of a ccTLD or a gTLD. You, living in a country where
freedom of speech is taken for granted, might not be able to grasp
the political importance of a TLD in some parts of the world.
Having been at the heart of conflicts regarding .MK and .PS, I can
tell you that even though this was a long time ago, it got people
in the street to be really upset. When .PS was allocated, some
people in the street were celebrating whilst other people in the
street were very upset.
OK - so they're ccTLDs. Well, consider the issue of Geo Regions
now. It's not about abuse, or confusion or stability. It has the
potential to tap into people's identity - whether that is
cultural, or tribal, or traditional. It is way more complex than
an issue of abuse, confusion or stability. For some people, it
might be baffling that there is so much emphasis about Geo Regions
because they don't see it as an important topic. For others, a
region's name might equate to an immediate death in the family
through a local conflict; a sense of pride to be part of that
region, and a strong sense of hate towards any corporation that
might use that region's name in a banal product. I also repeat the
concern that there are hundreds of cultures/tribes in the world
that have a tradition of oral history and that need to be given
the chance of being provided with their own TLD as a matter of
survival. That is affecting a small percentage of people on the
planet, but I believe we have a duty towards them too.
So I question calling the criterion "a demonstrable effect on end
users", because this means it needs to have an effect on your
average end user, and the world is not made up of average people,
but of individuals. If a topic coming before the CPWG has an
effect on one person, I'd like to hear from that person, bottom
up, and not be told top down that "this has no demonstrable effect
on end users" especially if this determination is
mechanical/algorithmic.
Kindest regards,
Olivier
ps. don't get me started on the credibility of At-Large in ICANN.
I am of the view that ICANN would have no credibility without
At-Large.
On 07/08/2019 22:31, Jonathan Zuck wrote:
Agree completely!!!!!!!!!
Jonathan Zuck
Executive Director
Innovators Network Foundation
I recommend that we re-focus our policy magnifying
glass towards ICANN policies as suggested by Evan
in a previous email: "...
imploring ALAC to concentrate its comments on
those issues with demonstrable effect on end
users (abuse, confusion, stability, etc)"
So, I suggest that as part of the way the CPWG
works today, we frame any future policy work by
applying these criteria first and decide if we
want to comment, refer it to other WGs or do
nothing at all.
Let's talk about this during today's call.
-ed
On Wed, Aug 7, 2019 at 4:43
AM Evan Leibovitch <
evan@telly.org>
wrote:
Hi Sala, long time no talk.
My
challenge is whether a non-registrant
end-user interest exists in this either
way, and whether ALAC has credibility to
pass judgement on the program at all as
part of its bylaw mandate.
Of course, the ALAC has credibility,
were'nt you a part of ALAC.
Indeed I was, even Vice-Chair for a few years.
That's how I got close enough to understand that
there is indeed a challenge of credibility. A
serious one that impairs our voice when we speak on
issues that *do* effect end-users.
If we are asked "upon what do you base you assertion
that end users want XXX policy?", we struggle. In
reality the 15 ALAC reps are making judgment calls
regarding what they think end users want, based on
really little more than an educated guess. (the
model of ALAC members soliciting RALOs that then
solicit their ALSs on policy issues is rarely in
play.) Those who may oppose our PoV know this, and
have a valid point when they challenge the basis
upon which we choose our sides. Often our educated
guesses are good ones but that's still all they are,
devoid of real research of what end-users want/need
from ICANN.
IMO,
this is an issue of interest to other
ICANN constituencies but the end-user
constituency has no stake in how it is
resolved.
I disagree. The end user has a stake
as was with the Amazon scenario etc.
Please elaborate. Exactly what stake does the
end-user have?
Do you really think end-users care who owns .amazon?
Upon what do you base this assertion?
When I asked around to people I knew who weren't
techies or policy wonks, there was actually a
general sentiment that it didn't matter, and if they
had to choose .amazon should go to the book company
and .amazonas should go to the governments if they
really thought it was needed.
I suspect that if we solicited public opinion,
globally more people would find it more useful if
the bookstore owned the TLD. Again, what we might
guess with an NGO mindset might conflict with what
end-users really want. So when we stake a position
and are challenged, upon what do we base our PoV?
Credibility challenge.
The
question at hand is not "is Applicant
support worthwhile" but "do end users
care if there is applicant support or
not".
Of course they do
Evidence? Rationale? Please, tell me exactly why
they care. Not "should they care" but "do they
care". I really want to know the reasoning behind
the assertion.
even if they are not aware, that is
where the ALAC has to make a judgment call.
Again, what is rationale for why ALAC *must* speak
up even if its constituency has no interest in the
issue?
Do we speak merely for the sake of speaking?
Noted, but your questioning the
credibility of ALAC
As Olivier and Maureen and anyone else active in
ALAC can attest, the credibility challenge comes
from all over ICANN. I am trying to address it by
imploring ALAC to concentrate its comments on those
issues with demonstrable effect on end users (abuse,
confusion, stability, etc)
- Evan
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