Understood. However, this sort of research requires a clear identification of the universe to be studied, the wording that will be used, and the environment
in which it will be asked. I think we need some clear parameters and questions, and I don’t think we have those yet. Hopefully after our call today, AG can provide some guidance.
Michael R.
From: Tushnet, Rebecca [mailto:rtushnet@law.harvard.edu]
Sent: Friday, June 15, 2018 2:27 PM
To: Michael Graham (ELCA) <migraham@expedia.com>; Ariel Liang <ariel.liang@icann.org>; gnso-rpm-data@icann.org
Subject: Re: Actions & Notes: RPM Data Sub Team 15 June 2018
As I said on the call, this is standard comprehension research, relied on by courts and marketing departments. When you want to know what members of a group take away from a message, you show it
to them and ask them about it, even if they haven't seen it before. It is precisely the kind of data driven research this working group is supposed to conduct.
Rebecca Tushnet
Frank Stanton Professor of First Amendment Law, Harvard Law School
703 593 6759
From: Michael Graham (ELCA) <migraham@expedia.com>
Sent: Friday, June 15, 2018 5:12:17 PM
To: Tushnet, Rebecca; Ariel Liang;
gnso-rpm-data@icann.org
Subject: RE: Actions & Notes: RPM Data Sub Team 15 June 2018
Thanks, Rebecca. From your explanation, then, we do not want to ask hypothetical questions, but want to ask what subjects’ understanding of the Claims Notice
is? That makes sense if asked of actual registrants or applicants who received the notices. I don’t think it makes sense, however, to ask this question of those who have not gone through the process. Then it becomes a hypothetical: If you received this
notice, what does it tell you?
Without the context of involvement in the process I don’t think “potential registrants” would provide relevant or useful information.
I’ll go back to the questions after the weekend to see how and who they address the issue of effectiveness of the actual Claims Notice to. That will better
answer my concerns I hope.
Michael R.
From: Tushnet, Rebecca [mailto:rtushnet@law.harvard.edu]
Sent: Friday, June 15, 2018 2:01 PM
To: Michael Graham (ELCA) <migraham@expedia.com>; Ariel Liang <ariel.liang@icann.org>;
gnso-rpm-data@icann.org
Subject: Re: Actions & Notes: RPM Data Sub Team 15 June 2018
Surveying potential registrants (defined in the survey as those who either attempted but did not complete a new gTLD registration, or would consider a new gTLD registration in the future) for their
understanding of the meaning of the claims notice is not hypothetical--it is a standard reception survey of the target audience. The question is not generally what issues kept some potential registrants away--that is a good deal broader than our task, I believe.
The question is what people considering new gTLD registrations take away from the Claims Notice when they read it. That is one of the key questions this working group has about the functioning of the Claims Notice.
Past and future new gTLD registrants are our universe. Depending on their past experiences, including receipt of claims notices (if we get any such respondents) we may have different questions for
different subgroups. But they are the target group as a whole, and should get the same questions, except for those that don't apply to them.
Rebecca Tushnet
Frank Stanton Professor of First Amendment Law, Harvard Law School
703 593 6759
From: Gnso-rpm-data <gnso-rpm-data-bounces@icann.org>
on behalf of Michael Graham (ELCA) <migraham@expedia.com>
Sent: Friday, June 15, 2018 4:50:32 PM
To: Ariel Liang; gnso-rpm-data@icann.org
Subject: Re: [Gnso-rpm-data] Actions & Notes: RPM Data Sub Team 15 June 2018
Thanks, Ariel. I will review the Tape (as they say), but believe I disagree with the last point unless the meaning is that we would send a single survey to both registrants and “potential
registrants” (although I would like to understand better how this last universe will be identified/selected) but according to which group they fall into, they will follow separate branches – registrants being asked whether they received Claims Notices and
what they did/how they reacted; and potential registrants being asked why they did not apply for registration – i.e. what hypothetical issues could arise that kept them away.
I do not think we should mix them or that we should ask purely hypothetical questions of anyone since these will only obtain opinions, beliefs, and perceptions – not what the effects of the
RPMs actually have been.
Michael R.
From: Gnso-rpm-data [mailto:gnso-rpm-data-bounces@icann.org]
On Behalf Of Ariel Liang
Sent: Friday, June 15, 2018 11:56 AM
To: gnso-rpm-data@icann.org
Subject: [Gnso-rpm-data] Actions & Notes: RPM Data Sub Team 15 June 2018
Dear All,
Please see below the action items and notes captured by staff from the Data Sub Team call held on 15 June 2018 (1600
UTC). Staff have posted to the wiki space the action items and notes. Please note that these will be high-level notes and are not meant as a substitute for the transcript or recording. The recording, AC chat, and attendance records are posted on the
wiki at: https://community.icann.org/x/ZYMpBQ
Have a great weekend!
Best Regards,
Ariel
Ariel Xinyue Liang
Policy Analyst | Washington, DC
Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN)
----------------
ACTION ITEM
NOTES
Q2
Q2b
Q2c
Q2e
-
I would not be sued if I continued
-
I would not be subject to an action to take the domain if I continued
-
No one else had a legal right to the name
-
I had legitimate or legal right to the domain
-
It does not seem like too much trouble to continue
-
I consulted with an attorney and it was fine
-
I was committed to the domain name for person/business reasons
-
It matched investments names I already own in a portfolio (going with "theme" registrants)
-
I didn't understand the notice
-
Something else [explain]
Q2g
Q2g(i)
Q2g(ii) – Q2h(i)
-
Would you be nervous to register the domain name? -- provide options
-
If yes, what actions would you take? -- provide options
-
If no, what is the reason? -- provide options
-
Does trademark law matter?
-
Show trademark claims notice.
-
Q2g(iv) – confidence?
-
Would you consult with an attorney? [maybe also “would you talk with domain name registrar, etc?]
-
Q2h(i) – Why you abandoned?
-
Q2g(iii) – trademark law knowledge
Q2h(i)
Discussion about the open-ended questions
Discussion about hypothetical questions
-
Keep the hypo question for the potential registrant survey
-
In the registrant survey, ask respondents did they receive claims survey, what they did to it, what was the purpose of their registration, etc. elicit the insight without providing a hypothetical scenario?