Notes and Action Items - New gTLD Subsequent Procedures PDP WG - 03 June 2019
Dear Working Group members, Please see below the notes from the meeting today, 03 June 2019. These high-level notes are designed to help WG members navigate through the content of the call and are not a substitute for the recording, transcript, or the chat, which will be posted at: https://community.icann.org/display/NGSPP/2019-06-03+New+gTLD+Subsequent+Pro.... Please also see the referenced documents at: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1R4zXTH3hIgfbqoxyqsSp19Bl6J96NNeV7oCgxsXK.... Kind regards, Julie Julie Hedlund, Policy Director Notes and Action Items: Action Items: ACTION ITEM 1: 2.2.6 Accreditation Programs (e.g. RSP Pre-Approval): Ask a clarifying question to the GAC re: GAC: New Idea - RSP Program should consider security threats and use tools such as ICANN’s DAAR to identify any potential security risks for an application. Question from Jeff: How exactly would DAAR be used for this purpose? DAAR looks at current activity within a particular string, not at the likelihood of security threats in future applications. Notes: 1. Updates to Statements of Interest (SOIs): No updates provided. 2. Review of Summary Documents a. 2.2.6 Accreditation Programs (e.g., RSP Pre-Approval) - (see - https://docs.google.com/document/d/1R4zXTH3hIgfbqoxyqsSp19Bl6J96NNeV7oCgxsXK...) Outstanding Items: General Considerations for Program Implementation: -- GAC Comment - How would DAAR be used be used for this purpose? Not an RSP pre-approval issue -- ACTION ITEM: Ask for clarification. -- RrSG: New Idea - Program should take into consideration interoperability with ICANN-accredited registrars and there should be additional standardization of certain operational requirements. Note from Jeff: In discussion with Registrars at GDD Summit, they indicated that this comment was meant for all RSPs and not just those in the Pre-Approval Program. So to the extent that in general we adopt this requirement, it would be adopted for all RSPs. -- NCSG: New Idea - The program should be clear and transparent. Supports public cataloging of receipts against RSPs, and investigation and response taken to the complaints, as well as a process for rejecting approved RSPs. Comment from Jeff: Generally there are no compliance actions against an RSP, but rather against Registry Operators. How would this information be used? Discussion: -- The third-parties don’t have a contract with ICANN so don’t see how you could have a publicly available list. Not sure there is any value. -- Issues: 1) public cataloging of complaints; 2) Once you are on a pre-approved list how is a company removed and how is that communicated? Focus on the second question. -- Don’t think the pre-approval process would be public -- you are either on the list or not. -- If we are going to talk about a mechanism to get a company off the pre-approved list, we should think about what is the point and what are the impacts. -- Could indicate whether part of the question is not implementable. -- The pre-approval is you are pre-approved or you are not. If you provide back end services for a registry operator and the RO breaches SLAs there will be consequences for the RSP, but those consequences are determined by the RO. -- These are private contracts. Mechanisms for un-preapproval don't really have a place. -- The intent of the pre-approval is to overcome the repetitive nature of the technical evaluation experienced in the 2012 round. -- There isn’t a concept of an “unapproved” RSP. When we talk about RSPs and if they become “unapproved” that is a business proposition. This isn’t a certification process, but you are qualified to do business in the accreditation program. -- Maybe instead call them “pre-evaluated” RSPs. -- QUESTION: Does RSP pre-approval apply regardless of the services to be provided in connection with a particular application or is the ability to meet the needs related to proposed new services part of the evaluation even if the RSP is Pre-approved? QUESTION -- What might be at issue here is what's the term of the pre-approval? It holds until the completion of the application and evaluation process. From then on the registry operator is responsible for meeting the technical requirements. -- How is the applicant protected if there is a problem? -- If there are new registry services proposed then there would need to be a new evaluation. -- In terms of the applicant, one of the solutions could be if the applicant picked a RSP that had been taken off the list then the applicant could have time to pick another pre-approved RSP. -- On the EBERO and what it takes to get someone off the list, we haven’t agreed on that yet. Not sure what process that would be. -- The pre-approval holds until the completion of the application/evaluation process. After that the RO is responsible for meeting the technical requirements. Not sure how you would remove pre-approval. -- Whether an RSP is on a pre-approved list or not: Should be that at a point in time this RSP has qualified against a standard set of questions and that this stands for a period of time. There still would need to be monitoring by the RO. -- Agreement on the need for more information from ICANN on the EBERO-triggering incidents. -- This was supposed to provide efficiencies in the process. This was never meant to be an accreditation. -- Need to decide how long the pre-approval lasts and when another evaluation is required. -- the assumption was that the RSPs would retain their quality for that period of time, subject to pre-delegation testing. Timing of Program Launch: -- Set up principles: 1) That applicants should be able to use the results of a pre-approval program should allow sufficient time for an applicant to be able to use the results when they are deciding to apply for a new string. -- Not consistent with the comments of RySG -- the pre-approval is a condition for the next round. Next meeting: Start with Factoring in the Number of TLDs the RSP Intends to Support.
Follow inline some comments on today's discussions.
Discussion: -- The third-parties don’t have a contract with ICANN so don’t see how you could have a publicly available list. Not sure there is any value.
There are two questions here; one is the feasibility of making the list that ICANN Org already has of RSPs public or not. Every TLD currently in GDD portal has an RSP identifier, but there is no public list of all current RSPs in operation. The other is if there is value; I don't see much value either, but this is far from impossible. In fact it would be very simple, provided it serves a purpose.
-- Maybe instead call them “pre-evaluated” RSPs.
This option was floated before, and "pre-approval" seemed combining more acceptance and less rejection from the WG. But "pre-evaluated" wouldn't be wrong at all.
-- QUESTION: Does RSP pre-approval apply regardless of the services to be provided in connection with a particular application or is the ability to meet the needs related to proposed new services part of the evaluation even if the RSP is Pre-approved? QUESTION
That's likely to be impossible to generalize. I suggest leaving to the evaluators of the proposed "non-vanilla" services if those services require specific additional evaluation or not. That could take the form of clarifying questions to the proposed services.
-- If there are new registry services proposed then there would need to be a new evaluation.
Yes, for some definition of "new". This point will come in later discussions in the sections about evaluation.
-- What might be at issue here is what's the term of the pre-approval? It holds until the completion of the application and evaluation process. From then on the registry operator is responsible for meeting the technical requirements.
-- The pre-approval holds until the completion of the application/evaluation process. After that the RO is responsible for meeting the technical requirements. Not sure how you would remove pre-approval.
-- Whether an RSP is on a pre-approved list or not: Should be that at a point in time this RSP has qualified against a standard set of questions and that this stands for a period of time. There still would need to be monitoring by the RO.
-- Need to decide how long the pre-approval lasts and when another evaluation is required. -- the assumption was that the RSPs would retain their quality for that period of time, subject to pre-delegation testing.
It could hold until the evaluation criteria stays substantially similar to the one in which RSP got pre-approval on. I believe that content matters more than time here. On PDT, we should be careful that ICANN blames the policy and AGB for using the same PDT to do first time delegations and to do RSP transition. While some tests are indeed the same, we should at least free the test at policy-level from being an exact replica of one another, and leave it to fulfilling the stability mission for how these two tests are similar or not.
-- Agreement on the need for more information from ICANN on the EBERO-triggering incidents. -- This was supposed to provide efficiencies in the process. This was never meant to be an accreditation.
At least not in how loaded the term accreditation carries meaning within the ICANN framework. The word in its natural habitat, the English language, doesn't seem to be so strong as its usage in ICANN matters. But it what it is now, so better to avoid the accreditation terminology.
Next meeting: Start with Factoring in the Number of TLDs the RSP Intends to Support.
While load capacity is something that appeals to intuition, it's not how registry systems work. An RSP could handle a million brand TLDs and still fail to support the land rush of a single open TLD that is either too cheap or too popular at pre-registrations. Landrush and steady state load patterns are very connected to commercial definitions, and one constant theme in the 2012 program is how TLDs moved from one model to another. Rubens
Jeff pointed out in response to my question on the call that the public comment on the duration of the “pre-approved” status ranged from 4 months to one year. That is pretty hard to ignore when developing a Principle related to the duration of RSP “pre-approval”. I think another issue might be allowing ICANN to put a stop on pre-approval applications in order to allow these to be completed before the application window opens. I realize some will say this is anti-competitive, but it almost seems as though an “RSP pre-approval window” would mean a far more orderly process in the next round. Regarding a public list, you will have to have an agreement that accompanies the pre-approval process. The reasons are that (1) applicants will have to be able to verify the pre-approval when making decisions on the right RSPs to contact when issuing RFPs for RSP services, (2) an RSP who is not “pre-approved” by ICANN will need an appeal mechanism if it does not agree with ICANN’s assessment of its capabilities, and (3) the agreement established with ICANN will have to state the information required to be submitted in order to obtain the pre-approval and will have to state under what conditions ICANN can revoke the pre-approval. Regarding publication of the pre-approved list, all you really need is the RSP’s consent to publish status when applying for pre-approval. As a WG, we should likely be asking ICANN Org and ICANN Legal whether anyone thinks you can run a Pre-Approval program without any terms and conditions being accepted by the RSP applying for pre-approval. As to marketing, I disagree with Greg Shatan’s comment and strongly agree with Jamie Baxter’s comments on the last call. The whole issue of allocation of ICANN staff resources to the speed and order of processing applications is still in front of us and it is a big deal. Speed to market is very important. RSP pre-approval is an important aspect of speed to market. Many of the questions related to processing of applications in the next round are in fact motivated by the desire to improve speed to market for applicants. The advantage lies with those who (1) have done this many times before, (2) get the RSP pre-approval, and (3) list only the “plain vanilla” services in their application. The last element is the one we debated in Work Track 4 (and SubGroup B) because the “plain vanilla” approach to the new gTLD application does not serve the goal of innovation that is supposed to be the justification for the whole program. (You may recall that a couple of us in Work Track 4 observed that sticking with “plain vanilla’ services applications should not result in faster processing of those applications. ) I still think the whole new gTLD program falls short of being “innovative” in nature, although Kurt Pritz did an admirable job of presenting a few innovative TLDs in his presentation in Barcelona. I sincerely hope that as the full WG moves forward, we will be able to develop policy that encourages more innovation in the space., not less. Anne Anne E. Aikman-Scalese Of Counsel 520.629.4428 office 520.879.4725 fax AAikman@lrrc.com<mailto:AAikman@lrrc.com> _____________________________ [cid:image001.png@01D51AE3.22E1A810] Lewis Roca Rothgerber Christie LLP One South Church Avenue, Suite 700 Tucson, Arizona 85701-1611 lrrc.com<http://lrrc.com/> From: Gnso-newgtld-wg <gnso-newgtld-wg-bounces@icann.org> On Behalf Of Rubens Kuhl Sent: Monday, June 3, 2019 6:54 PM To: gnso-newgtld-wg@icann.org Subject: Re: [Gnso-newgtld-wg] Notes and Action Items - New gTLD Subsequent Procedures PDP WG - 03 June 2019 [EXTERNAL] ________________________________ Follow inline some comments on today's discussions. Discussion: -- The third-parties don’t have a contract with ICANN so don’t see how you could have a publicly available list. Not sure there is any value. There are two questions here; one is the feasibility of making the list that ICANN Org already has of RSPs public or not. Every TLD currently in GDD portal has an RSP identifier, but there is no public list of all current RSPs in operation. The other is if there is value; I don't see much value either, but this is far from impossible. In fact it would be very simple, provided it serves a purpose. -- Maybe instead call them “pre-evaluated” RSPs. This option was floated before, and "pre-approval" seemed combining more acceptance and less rejection from the WG. But "pre-evaluated" wouldn't be wrong at all. -- QUESTION: Does RSP pre-approval apply regardless of the services to be provided in connection with a particular application or is the ability to meet the needs related to proposed new services part of the evaluation even if the RSP is Pre-approved? QUESTION That's likely to be impossible to generalize. I suggest leaving to the evaluators of the proposed "non-vanilla" services if those services require specific additional evaluation or not. That could take the form of clarifying questions to the proposed services. -- If there are new registry services proposed then there would need to be a new evaluation. Yes, for some definition of "new". This point will come in later discussions in the sections about evaluation. -- What might be at issue here is what's the term of the pre-approval? It holds until the completion of the application and evaluation process. From then on the registry operator is responsible for meeting the technical requirements. -- The pre-approval holds until the completion of the application/evaluation process. After that the RO is responsible for meeting the technical requirements. Not sure how you would remove pre-approval. -- Whether an RSP is on a pre-approved list or not: Should be that at a point in time this RSP has qualified against a standard set of questions and that this stands for a period of time. There still would need to be monitoring by the RO. -- Need to decide how long the pre-approval lasts and when another evaluation is required. -- the assumption was that the RSPs would retain their quality for that period of time, subject to pre-delegation testing. It could hold until the evaluation criteria stays substantially similar to the one in which RSP got pre-approval on. I believe that content matters more than time here. On PDT, we should be careful that ICANN blames the policy and AGB for using the same PDT to do first time delegations and to do RSP transition. While some tests are indeed the same, we should at least free the test at policy-level from being an exact replica of one another, and leave it to fulfilling the stability mission for how these two tests are similar or not. -- Agreement on the need for more information from ICANN on the EBERO-triggering incidents. -- This was supposed to provide efficiencies in the process. This was never meant to be an accreditation. At least not in how loaded the term accreditation carries meaning within the ICANN framework. The word in its natural habitat, the English language, doesn't seem to be so strong as its usage in ICANN matters. But it what it is now, so better to avoid the accreditation terminology. Next meeting: Start with Factoring in the Number of TLDs the RSP Intends to Support. While load capacity is something that appeals to intuition, it's not how registry systems work. An RSP could handle a million brand TLDs and still fail to support the land rush of a single open TLD that is either too cheap or too popular at pre-registrations. Landrush and steady state load patterns are very connected to commercial definitions, and one constant theme in the 2012 program is how TLDs moved from one model to another. Rubens ________________________________ This message and any attachments are intended only for the use of the individual or entity to which they are addressed. If the reader of this message or an attachment is not the intended recipient or the employee or agent responsible for delivering the message or attachment to the intended recipient you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution or copying of this message or any attachment is strictly prohibited. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately by replying to the sender. The information transmitted in this message and any attachments may be privileged, is intended only for the personal and confidential use of the intended recipients, and is covered by the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, 18 U.S.C. §2510-2521.
On 4 Jun 2019, at 18:38, Aikman-Scalese, Anne <AAikman@lrrc.com> wrote:
Jeff pointed out in response to my question on the call that the public comment on the duration of the “pre-approved” status ranged from 4 months to one year. That is pretty hard to ignore when developing a Principle related to the duration of RSP “pre-approval”.
Duration only applies to a time-based criteria. I don't remember any question on whether it should be time-based or not.
I think another issue might be allowing ICANN to put a stop on pre-approval applications in order to allow these to be completed before the application window opens. I realize some will say this is anti-competitive, but it almost seems as though an “RSP pre-approval window” would mean a far more orderly process in the next round.
I personally don't see a problem with this, but let's hear from those that think this triggers anti-competitive issues.
Regarding a public list, you will have to have an agreement that accompanies the pre-approval process. The reasons are that (1) applicants will have to be able to verify the pre-approval when making decisions on the right RSPs to contact when issuing RFPs for RSP services, (2) an RSP who is not “pre-approved” by ICANN will need an appeal mechanism if it does not agree with ICANN’s assessment of its capabilities, and (3) the agreement established with ICANN will have to state the information required to be submitted in order to obtain the pre-approval and will have to state under what conditions ICANN can revoke the pre-approval. Regarding publication of the pre-approved list, all you really need is the RSP’s consent to publish status when applying for pre-approval. As a WG, we should likely be asking ICANN Org and ICANN Legal whether anyone thinks you can run a Pre-Approval program without any terms and conditions being accepted by the RSP applying for pre-approval.
I mentioned a possible public list of all RSPs; I believe it would be contradictory to have a non-public list of pre-approved RSPs. ICANN currently has some lightweight mechanisms like MoU's with URS/UDRP providers, that I believe are more suited for RSPs than the contracts used for EBERO providers, for instance.
As to marketing, I disagree with Greg Shatan’s comment and strongly agree with Jamie Baxter’s comments on the last call. The whole issue of allocation of ICANN staff resources to the speed and order of processing applications is still in front of us and it is a big deal. Speed to market is very important. RSP pre-approval is an important aspect of speed to market. Many of the questions related to processing of applications in the next round are in fact motivated by the desire to improve speed to market for applicants. The advantage lies with those who (1) have done this many times before, (2) get the RSP pre-approval, and
The approach to financial evaluation suggested in the initial report also allows for faster processing, but since it's different from the 2012, it won't favor those that wrote hundreds of 2012 applications. I don't see the overall SubPro approach neither favouring or disfavouring incumbent registries, it looks more like a lessons learned exercise, with "OK" parts being kept or only slightly adjusted, and deficiencies causing major replacements.
(3) list only the “plain vanilla” services in their application. The last element is the one we debated in Work Track 4 (and SubGroup B) because the “plain vanilla” approach to the new gTLD application does not serve the goal of innovation that is supposed to be the justification for the whole program. (You may recall that a couple of us in Work Track 4 observed that sticking with “plain vanilla’ services applications should not result in faster processing of those applications. )
I believe that's a discussion for when we get to that section...
I still think the whole new gTLD program falls short of being “innovative” in nature, although Kurt Pritz did an admirable job of presenting a few innovative TLDs in his presentation in Barcelona. I sincerely hope that as the full WG moves forward, we will be able to develop policy that encourages more innovation in the space., not less.
Most of possible innovation is already hindered by the aggregate of registry agreement and consensus policies (and also market structure in emerging markets). There is nothing this WG can do about that part... specifically on services, such innovation can come both from established TLDs (like the crypto coin .luxe offering) or from new TLDs, equally. The only innovations requiring new strings are those that are somewhat connected to those new services to be commercially interesting. One disadvantage in the new gTLD program for any type of innovation is its lack of fast timing; the importance of timing in start-up success is well known in business (see https://www.inc.com/chris-dessi/this-ted-talk-explains-the-5-reasons-why-sta... <https://www.inc.com/chris-dessi/this-ted-talk-explains-the-5-reasons-why-sta...> for a summary and the link to a reference talk on this), but the community is clearly on the side of taking time to consider the impacts of proposed TLDs (rounds, public comment periods, objection periods etc.), and that's also an anti-innovative feature of the program that isn't going to change. Rubens
Anne, I just wanted to clarify some of the items discussed on the last call. 1. When we were discussing the range of four months to a year, that was referring to the length of time needed between the completion of “pre-approval Process for RSPs” and the commencement of the Application Window to accept applications for TLD strings. Essentially it amounts to the amount of notice that perspective applicants have of which RSPs passed the technical evaluation prior to when the start date of submitting applications begins. This is precisely related to the points you raise in your second paragraph. 1. With respect to that second paragraph, I am not sure it needs to be as comprehensive as you are making it sound. * Pre-approval process should not need an appeals process, because (a) it is a voluntary program, and (b) RSPs that are not “pre-approved” can always support applications and elect to be evaluated again during the actual application window. * The discussion thus far has leaned towards not having contracts between RSPs and ICANN governing any ongoing relationship. Remember, this is just a process to pass the evaluation earlier in time than during the actual application window. * That said, as you state, there may have to be a click-wrap Ts and Cs that the RSP must agree to when submitting their application. It would not govern an ongoing relationship, but rather just the limited RSP Pre-Approval Process. Hope this helps a little in understanding my current thinking….which of course is shaped by the discussions and comments we have gotten thus far. Best regards, Jeffrey J. 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From: Gnso-newgtld-wg <gnso-newgtld-wg-bounces@icann.org> On Behalf Of Aikman-Scalese, Anne Sent: Tuesday, June 4, 2019 5:38 PM To: Rubens Kuhl <rubensk@nic.br>; gnso-newgtld-wg@icann.org Subject: Re: [Gnso-newgtld-wg] Notes and Action Items - New gTLD Subsequent Procedures PDP WG - 03 June 2019 Jeff pointed out in response to my question on the call that the public comment on the duration of the “pre-approved” status ranged from 4 months to one year. That is pretty hard to ignore when developing a Principle related to the duration of RSP “pre-approval”. I think another issue might be allowing ICANN to put a stop on pre-approval applications in order to allow these to be completed before the application window opens. I realize some will say this is anti-competitive, but it almost seems as though an “RSP pre-approval window” would mean a far more orderly process in the next round. Regarding a public list, you will have to have an agreement that accompanies the pre-approval process. The reasons are that (1) applicants will have to be able to verify the pre-approval when making decisions on the right RSPs to contact when issuing RFPs for RSP services, (2) an RSP who is not “pre-approved” by ICANN will need an appeal mechanism if it does not agree with ICANN’s assessment of its capabilities, and (3) the agreement established with ICANN will have to state the information required to be submitted in order to obtain the pre-approval and will have to state under what conditions ICANN can revoke the pre-approval. Regarding publication of the pre-approved list, all you really need is the RSP’s consent to publish status when applying for pre-approval. As a WG, we should likely be asking ICANN Org and ICANN Legal whether anyone thinks you can run a Pre-Approval program without any terms and conditions being accepted by the RSP applying for pre-approval. As to marketing, I disagree with Greg Shatan’s comment and strongly agree with Jamie Baxter’s comments on the last call. The whole issue of allocation of ICANN staff resources to the speed and order of processing applications is still in front of us and it is a big deal. Speed to market is very important. RSP pre-approval is an important aspect of speed to market. Many of the questions related to processing of applications in the next round are in fact motivated by the desire to improve speed to market for applicants. The advantage lies with those who (1) have done this many times before, (2) get the RSP pre-approval, and (3) list only the “plain vanilla” services in their application. The last element is the one we debated in Work Track 4 (and SubGroup B) because the “plain vanilla” approach to the new gTLD application does not serve the goal of innovation that is supposed to be the justification for the whole program. (You may recall that a couple of us in Work Track 4 observed that sticking with “plain vanilla’ services applications should not result in faster processing of those applications. ) I still think the whole new gTLD program falls short of being “innovative” in nature, although Kurt Pritz did an admirable job of presenting a few innovative TLDs in his presentation in Barcelona. I sincerely hope that as the full WG moves forward, we will be able to develop policy that encourages more innovation in the space., not less. Anne Anne E. Aikman-Scalese Of Counsel 520.629.4428 office 520.879.4725 fax AAikman@lrrc.com<mailto:AAikman@lrrc.com> _____________________________ [cid:image001.png@01D51FD8.41F80D30] Lewis Roca Rothgerber Christie LLP One South Church Avenue, Suite 700 Tucson, Arizona 85701-1611 lrrc.com<http://lrrc.com/> From: Gnso-newgtld-wg <gnso-newgtld-wg-bounces@icann.org<mailto:gnso-newgtld-wg-bounces@icann.org>> On Behalf Of Rubens Kuhl Sent: Monday, June 3, 2019 6:54 PM To: gnso-newgtld-wg@icann.org<mailto:gnso-newgtld-wg@icann.org> Subject: Re: [Gnso-newgtld-wg] Notes and Action Items - New gTLD Subsequent Procedures PDP WG - 03 June 2019 [EXTERNAL] ________________________________ Follow inline some comments on today's discussions. Discussion: -- The third-parties don’t have a contract with ICANN so don’t see how you could have a publicly available list. Not sure there is any value. There are two questions here; one is the feasibility of making the list that ICANN Org already has of RSPs public or not. Every TLD currently in GDD portal has an RSP identifier, but there is no public list of all current RSPs in operation. The other is if there is value; I don't see much value either, but this is far from impossible. In fact it would be very simple, provided it serves a purpose. -- Maybe instead call them “pre-evaluated” RSPs. This option was floated before, and "pre-approval" seemed combining more acceptance and less rejection from the WG. But "pre-evaluated" wouldn't be wrong at all. -- QUESTION: Does RSP pre-approval apply regardless of the services to be provided in connection with a particular application or is the ability to meet the needs related to proposed new services part of the evaluation even if the RSP is Pre-approved? QUESTION That's likely to be impossible to generalize. I suggest leaving to the evaluators of the proposed "non-vanilla" services if those services require specific additional evaluation or not. That could take the form of clarifying questions to the proposed services. -- If there are new registry services proposed then there would need to be a new evaluation. Yes, for some definition of "new". This point will come in later discussions in the sections about evaluation. -- What might be at issue here is what's the term of the pre-approval? It holds until the completion of the application and evaluation process. From then on the registry operator is responsible for meeting the technical requirements. -- The pre-approval holds until the completion of the application/evaluation process. After that the RO is responsible for meeting the technical requirements. Not sure how you would remove pre-approval. -- Whether an RSP is on a pre-approved list or not: Should be that at a point in time this RSP has qualified against a standard set of questions and that this stands for a period of time. There still would need to be monitoring by the RO. -- Need to decide how long the pre-approval lasts and when another evaluation is required. -- the assumption was that the RSPs would retain their quality for that period of time, subject to pre-delegation testing. It could hold until the evaluation criteria stays substantially similar to the one in which RSP got pre-approval on. I believe that content matters more than time here. On PDT, we should be careful that ICANN blames the policy and AGB for using the same PDT to do first time delegations and to do RSP transition. While some tests are indeed the same, we should at least free the test at policy-level from being an exact replica of one another, and leave it to fulfilling the stability mission for how these two tests are similar or not. -- Agreement on the need for more information from ICANN on the EBERO-triggering incidents. -- This was supposed to provide efficiencies in the process. This was never meant to be an accreditation. At least not in how loaded the term accreditation carries meaning within the ICANN framework. The word in its natural habitat, the English language, doesn't seem to be so strong as its usage in ICANN matters. But it what it is now, so better to avoid the accreditation terminology. Next meeting: Start with Factoring in the Number of TLDs the RSP Intends to Support. While load capacity is something that appeals to intuition, it's not how registry systems work. An RSP could handle a million brand TLDs and still fail to support the land rush of a single open TLD that is either too cheap or too popular at pre-registrations. Landrush and steady state load patterns are very connected to commercial definitions, and one constant theme in the 2012 program is how TLDs moved from one model to another. Rubens ________________________________ This message and any attachments are intended only for the use of the individual or entity to which they are addressed. If the reader of this message or an attachment is not the intended recipient or the employee or agent responsible for delivering the message or attachment to the intended recipient you are hereby notified that any dissemination, distribution or copying of this message or any attachment is strictly prohibited. If you have received this communication in error, please notify us immediately by replying to the sender. 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participants (4)
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Aikman-Scalese, Anne -
Jeff Neuman -
Julie Hedlund -
Rubens Kuhl