Hi Susan. This is a bit confusing. I recall that Jeff noted there was no high level agreement for this proposition. Rather he stated there could be high level agreement that strings from prior rounds must complete
application evaluation prior to consideration of subsequent round applications for the same string. He has since confirmed that in a post to the list.
How did we get to a proposal for “no applications for the same string?”
Anne
From: Gnso-newgtld-wg <gnso-newgtld-wg-bounces@icann.org>
On Behalf Of Susan Payne
Sent: Tuesday, September 3, 2019 3:54 PM
To: gnso-newgtld-wg@icann.org
Subject: [Gnso-newgtld-wg] Proposal on Prioritising Applications - prohibition on applying in a later round for a string from a prior round which has not yet been delegated
[EXTERNAL]
All
During a call a couple of weeks ago, when we were discussing application prioritisation, I volunteered to circulate for consideration a proposal to prohibit allowing applications in a later application
window where the string has previously been applied for and not yet been delegated. Although it had originally been proposed that this might extend to confusingly similar strings, having reflected on the discussion during the call I accept that this would
probably be unrealistic, since confusing similarity needs to be determined as part of the TLD evaluation process. I have therefore limited this proposal to exact match strings, as follows:
Rationale
We know that, many years after the 2012 application submission period closed, there are still a handful of applications for TLD strings which remain unresolved, generally due to delays caused
by recourse to ICANNs accountability mechanisms.
Whilst we all hope that in subsequent procedures we will have fewer of the challenges that we saw in the 2012 round, it is reasonable to assume that some will still occur.
In any event, if subsequent procedures take the form of a series of discrete application submission periods, with known, finite, periods between them, then it is conceivable that applications
from one application submission period may still be being processed when then next application submission period opens.
If the period between application submission periods is reasonably short (12 months has been discussed, for example) we could conceivably see the added complication of applications for the same
string being queued up across multiple windows.
Whilst a later applicant who applied unsuccessfully for a TLD, which was eventually allocated to an applicant from a prior application submission period, could expect to recover their application
fee, there is a cost to putting together an application in excess of the ICANN fee, and this would not be recoverable. The later applicant could also have their application fee tied up for months or even years, pending the outcome of the earlier application(s).
Some have argued that this is the choice of the later applicant, that they can check whether there are prior “live” applications and decide accordingly whether they still want to apply. I believe
this does a disservice to potential applicants, particularly those who are not so familiar with all of the history of prior applications and who may not appreciate that in many cases they would have no realistic prospect of being allocated the TLD string that
ICANN has allowed them to apply for. Blocking the TLD from application, until such time as the previous applications are resolved, seems a much fairer approach.
Susan Payne
Head of Legal Policy
Valideus
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