Hey Greg, 

"... no invitation needed." Thank you for stating the obvious. Your response shows that my attempt to convey a sense of humour failed. I guess my failure just adds to Olivier's original failed attempt at humour when he shared the picture of protestors.

Unfortunately, I don't view the Cal AG's entrance into the game as merely interesting. I view it as a failure of iSOC to respect the trusted stewardship of .ORG. It also shows a lack of trust in ICANN's multistakeholder model to do the right thing based on principles. Finally, this issue has exposed a potential flaw in how At-Large conducts an open and bottom-up consensus building process. 

Lots of work to be done here, I guess. 

Cheers!
David

p.s. Hopefully my comments are pithy enough for this list. Unfortunately, I wasn't given much time on the CPWG weekly call to have a meaningful conversation about the important issues in front of At-Large. I remain committed to sharing my thoughts in a respectful way with the hope that positive change on multiple fronts might come out of this discussion. 

On Mon, Feb 3, 2020 at 12:46 AM Greg Shatan <greg@isoc-ny.org> wrote:
David,

FYI, the California Attorney General was already at the table, no invitation needed.  By law, the Cal AG has formal oversight authority over all non-profit corporations domiciled in California, including ICANN.  That said, I can't recall the last time (if ever) that the Cal AG exercised that authority with ICANN.  So this is an interesting turn of events....

Greg

On Sun, Feb 2, 2020 at 12:23 PM David Mackey <mackey361@gmail.com> wrote:
Thanks for sharing the information Marita. 

You know, it's a little funny. I don't remember seeing the California's Attorney General in the picture that Olivier shared with us a few days ago. 

It's possible that important issues on Internet Governance are so disconnected from the average end user that they have no clue what happens between Internet leadership organizations like ICANN and iSOC. 

This disconnection of knowledge might allow for funny behaviour motivated by financial gain for some insiders which adds no value to end users, but increases risk to a stable Internet by introducing financial leverage which didn't exist before an unnecessary financial transaction. 

Since iSOC has chosen a process which takes advantage of the disconnect with the public (end users), it would be nice to see ICANN make a principled decision based on an open multistakeholder process. The failure of an open and effective multistakeholder process invites other people to the table, like California's Attorney General for instance. 

Within ICANN, we also have our At-Large community. Having received the great training at ATLAS III about how the multistakeholder process is supposed to work, I wonder if the reality of the At-Large consensus building process is also severely disconnected from the ideal process that was taught at ICANN66. Unfortunately, the .ORG transfer seems to be pressing the fault lines of a public test of consensus withinin At-Large. This is a different problem from the .ORG transfer issue itself.

Just a thought or two. :-)

Cheers!
David

On Fri, Jan 31, 2020 at 4:53 PM Marita Moll <mmoll@ca.inter.net> wrote:

Attached for your information, letter to ICANN from the California AG.  ICANN has is now seeking a deadline extention from PIR  in order to reply to the 35 questions posed by the State of California re the proposed sale.

Marita

-------- Forwarded Message --------
Subject: [NCUC-DISCUSS] ICANN Receives Letter from California Attorney General Regarding .ORG Change of Control
Date: Fri, 31 Jan 2020 12:58:57 -0200
From: Bruna Martins dos Santos <bruna.mrtns@gmail.com>
To: NCUC Discuss <ncuc-discuss@lists.ncuc.org>


Dear NCUC, 

FYI

During this morning, at the NCSG call with Board Member Matthew Shears, he mentioned that the Office of the Attorney General of the State of California has requested information from ICANN regarding the PIR deal. The correspondence asks a set of 35 questions/requests to ICANN, from organizational matters, ICANNs capacity to regulate the registration fees and so on.

Icann also issued a blog post explaining that they are also "providing formal notice to PIR, pursuant to the terms of the PIR Registry Agreements, because the CA-AGO has requested that ICANN provide information that PIR designated as confidential.

In addition, the CA-AGO has asked for more time, surpassing the current ICANN deadline to review the proposed change of control of the PIR Registry Agreements that is currently set as 17 February 2020. Accordingly, the letter from ICANN to PIR requests additional time, up to 20 April 2020, to conclude both the CA-AGO and ICANN reviews."

Best regards, 

--
Bruna Martins dos Santos 

Skype ID: bruna.martinsantos
@boomartins
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