Thanks Milton for taking care of the ISPs’ interests. I would welcome this happening even more in future – but in a correct way.
I hardly think that the ISPs are sending "trademark lawyers" to the ISPCP constituency. NOGs are well represented there as long as they are interested at all in ICANN (including IANA functions). On technical issues we even run a specific email list with them because many of them don’t wish to play in the political arena, their focus is totally on the daily operational issues. A separate representation on the MRT would not bring any value.
Your point made in an earlier comment that the 3 CSG constituencies do vote almost not differently and therefore would be no justification to allocate separate seats to them on the MRT is taken from discussions we’ve had already 6-7 years ago. Repeating it in this context doesn’t make it more credible.
I would not take the fact that the esteemed chair of the RrSG publicly characterized IANA being boring as an indication that this SG may be not interested in IANA matters and would do without an MRT seat.
I see structuring of the MRT being a question of representing the interests in the IANA stewardship functions plus balancing these interests. So far numbers should be discussed at the end.
Thanks
Milton. I am not sure any group would need more than one person on the MRT
as long as the charter for the MRT explicitly requires that person to act
according to the directions of the group he/she
represents.
Chuck
From: Milton L Mueller
[mailto:mueller@syr.edu]
Sent: Sunday, December 21, 2014 6:17
PM
To: Gomes, Chuck; Greg Shatan
Cc:
cwg-stewardship@icann.org
Subject: RE: [CWG-Stewardship] Composition
of MRT
From: Gomes, Chuck [mailto:cgomes@verisign.com]
CG:
I definitely believe that it is important to include the opportunity for all
impacted parties to provide input into the MRT regarding major decisions like an
RFP. But if we start trying to find a place for all those outside of the
ICANN world on the MRT, we may find ourselves right back where we are now
regarding
MM:
I think we agree, I am not looking for a “place for all those outside the ICANN
world.” I am looking for a very focused MRT whose members
a)
DO have an interest in accurate, secure and neutral IANA implementation and
b)
do NOT have an interest in re-writing or circumventing policy.
So
I was thinking of adding ISPs, via their NOGs. Generally, ISPs are interested in
the functionality of the Internet and are poorly represented in ICANN, because
names are involved they tend to send trademark lawyers rather than operational
people. We might also look to entities like ISOC and IEEE. I just don’t want a
mirror image of the ICANN. I don’t think that can provide objective oversight.
CG:
if any such entities do not already have processes in place to represent their
members, how could we be assured that they were indeed representative of their
broader communities.
MM:
again, totally agree this is an issue, it was noted in my earlier messages,
that’s one reason we keep reverting to the GNSO structures. It is like the
drunken man at night looking for his keys under a lamppost at night, not because
that’s where the keys are most likely to be, but because that’s where the light
is better. But NOGs do have institutions: NANOG, ENOG, etc; I am not sure how
prepared they are to forward people but they certainly have the capability to
select representatives as well as any ICANN organ.
CG:
One advantage of the ICANN SOs and ACs is that they do have processes in place
for communicating and getting feedback from their community participants.
As long as the SOs and ACs provide mechanisms for stakeholders outside of ICANN
to participate, I personally think that that is the best way to go, albeit
avoiding the creation of an MRT that is too large.
MM:
I understand why someone from the GNSO feels this way. ;-) it is the familiar
and easy thing to do. It is not necessarily the best thing to do however. As a
matter of fact, the GNSO is never going to put people who are not well-known
actors in the GNSO into such a position. So the MRT members will be confined to
a narrow circle of well-known GNSO people – exactly the same people who are
making policy. Which is not entirely a bad thing, of course – but should it be
the _only_ thing?. Likewise, I see no reason why any of the AC’s need more than
one person on the MRT, unless they mistakenly view this as a voting game in
which they try to make policy. I do see why registries (both cc’s and g’s) as
customers of IANA have a special need to be well represented in any decision to
change or retain an IANA functions contractor. I do see why the users – both
commercial and noncommercial SGs – need to be there to make sure the registries
don’t get too cozy. But the idea that we need every GNSO constituency
represented on there strikes me as outlandish.