Evan, as I told you privately, in my opinion, there were certainly Board
members who understood that the nature of .org was paramount, and I am
not aware of any way, with PICs or otherwise, that we could guarantee
that it be preserved if the transfer to Ethos went through.
So, perhaps the AG's letter had some impact, but I do not believe it was
THE issue that caused the outcome, and probably not even a main one.
My personal opinion, and I presume it was one that Jonathan and the ALAC
considered, was that an absolute condition of the sale going through was
that there be iron-clad guarantees that the nature of the TLD be
preserved and it not be marketed as a .com equivalent or some other
similar dilution. I know of no way that could be done with contractual
terms, even if ICANN could get them inserted. So while I could live with
the sale going through WITH guarantees, I saw no way of getting those
guarantees.
I have been an ISOC member for about 25 years, a former ISOC Board
member, and the Board member who formally proposed that ISOC bid on .org.
So I have some history and perspective. If the reactions from Ethos had
been very different, perhaps I would have been convinced that the sale
was good. But what I saw was nothing close to them understanding the
issue, or providing satisfactory answers to the questions.
Indeed, *IF* the spirit of the 2002 delegation to PIR could be maintained
and enforced, I could have lived with the transfer. I believed (and still
believe) that this not dissimilar to how some and perhaps many Board
members felt. The lack of being able to satisfy the *IF* was
crucial.
Alan
At 2020-05-08 01:06 PM, Evan Leibovitch wrote:
On Fri, 8 May 2020 at 05:17,
Jonathan Zuck
<
JZuck@innovatorsnetwork.org> wrote:
- The fact is there was no real consensus among the At-Large about the
acquisition of PIR. There were essentially 4 proposals on the
table:
-
- Approve the sale
- Approve the sale with conditions (which is what both the ALAC and
NCSG settled upon)
- Deny the sale (essentially what happened)
- Take .ORG away from PIR and move it to a new entity
As I said, you got that wrong. Totally wrong. You fully missed the core
issue which was not "will Ethos screw registrants" but
"did ISOC violate the letter and spirit of the terms under which
ISOC was delegated .org in the first place". And, as history has now
shown, you (and ICANN) needed the CA AG to save the day.
- There WAS a strong consensus, led primarily by Roberto Gaetano, NOT
to let the sale go through without concessions so the group was motivated
to identify the appropriate concessions and perhaps bake them into the
.ORG contract so they would. Survive changes of ownership.
The issue was never about concessions. It was about stewardship of .org
as a registry that was just a little different from the others, and
whether it could be treated like as a chattel the way other domains
are.
The consensus appears to be that if Ethos jumped through just a few more
hoops, made just a few more garbage PICs and a better advisory board, the
sale would have been OK. That was not the view of ISOC chapters. It
was not the view of EFF. It was not the view of the American Red Cross or
the Girl Guides. It was not the view of the thousands of charities and
nonprofits that signed onto petitions. It is not the view of financial
analysts who discovered that the new registry would be saddled in debt
and inevitably forced to raise prices beyond the norm. It was not the
view of people who were around during the original delegation of the
domain to ISOC. It was not the view of a single .org registrants who
expressed an opinion. It was not the view of human rights
organizations.
But the CPWG and ALAC knew better than all of them!!
You should be embarrassed to have led that dereliction of duty. ICANN
does not seek independent wisdom from ALAC, it is seeking a reflection of
the public mood. The voice on the street, if you would, distilled maybe
but without judgment or second-guessing. And if ALAC could get something
so important so massively wrong that ICANN's government oversight had to
step in to fix, it's impossible to have any confidence that it will get
any of the minor opinions right.
- Now we can argue that many in the At-Large had a relationship
to ISOC which may have convoluted this discussion
Considering that the overwhelming consensus of ISOC Chapters and the
official stance of the ISOC Chapter Advisory Council was to oppose the
sale, clearly there were no signs of undue influence this way. Nobody is
arguing this so I wonder why you raise it.
- but there were also serious issues with the public comments that
arrived in volume and form the primary indication of “publicâ€
dissatisfaction with the deal.
Such as? Did you do any due diligence and contact any of the commenters
before summarily deeming their opinions inferior to yours?
That you use quotes on the word public in the above context is -- I don't
have a better word for it -- disgusting. The height of dismissive
elitism.
- We also need to set aside the fact that while many in the At-Large
work for non-profits, we are not the voice of non-profits at
ICANN.
Let's be really clear here. In this role you are not the voice of
anything. ALAC's role is to CHANNEL what end-users want from ICANN and
advise based on that, not pull opinions from scratch out of your
collective behinds. In this extraordinary case, evidence of sentiment
outside the bubble was plentiful. Any outside research at all would have
inevitably led to the correct conclusion on this issue, instead you chose
to ignore and "denigrate" it. This corporate oblivion to
the real public sentiment is clearly what drove the CA AG to intervene.
So you could have foregone that dreaded government intervention simply by
ensuring that ICANN knew the public mood rather than making one
up.
While I was in ALAC the "who the hell are you to claim to speak for
the billions?" retort from the domain industry always bothered me.
On reflection I realize that it was a perfectly valid criticism and holds
true today as much -- maybe more -- than ever. ALAC lacks any credibility
that it listens to the outside world. It guesses, based on its own
biases and framed by ICANN staff, and as such represents the view of no
more than the 15 ALAC reps and a handful of other self-appointed
"experts" -- present company included. There is zero effort
made to take the pulse of the public mood on issues, a flaw that was
exposed to the world this time.
Indeed ... who the hell is ALAC to claim to speak for the billions?
That question now needs to be asked from within At-Large too.
The original theory in At-Large's design was that ALSs were supposed to
offer a kind of broad-based audience that could be used to discuss issues
of import within a broader population and bring their opinions back,
through RALOs, to ALAC. Not billions, but much better than a few dozen
and guaranteed to be geographically diverse. For a ton of reasons well
beyond the scope of this thread, the ALS theory has proven a complete
failure. It can't work, ALAC never allocates the time and process to
enable ALS consultation to take place. And ALAC gets so involved with
trivial and irrelevant ICANN issues that could easily overwhelm broad
grassroots consultations.
- There were, of course, dissenters in the NCSG as well, such as Kathy
Kleinman, who believed that PICs were inherently evil and a product of a
top down decision making process under Fadi
For the record, and consistent since the day PICs were invented, I agree
with Kathy. So should ALAC.
- Now Evan, you might think that means they are not “fit for
“purpose†because of your belief in what represented the public
interest but I find it difficult to believe that the At-Large is somehow
corrupt and purposefully subverted that public interest.
Oh hell no. I'm not accusing anyone of corruption. Complacency, egotism
and maybe even cowardice, but not corruption.
- Evan
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