Michael, The Rules, and URS, respectively provide that examiners should be (a) “impartial and independent” and (b) “should have demonstrable relevant legal background, such as in trademark law”. Perhaps it would make more sense to reframe your question by reference to those previously-agreed provisions? Brian -----Original Message----- From: gnso-rpm-wg [mailto:gnso-rpm-wg-bounces@icann.org] On Behalf Of Michael Karanicolas Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2018 9:58 PM To: gnso-rpm-wg@icann.org Subject: Re: [gnso-rpm-wg] Redline Document: Proposed Questions to URS Providers Hi all, Please find a revised question regarding examiners attached: In selecting examiners, do you have policies in place that are aimed at developing a roster which includes a balance of lawyers who focus on trademark enforcement and those who represent respondents, and would you say these policies have been effective in generating a balance of examiners who represent both sides? Thanks, Michael Karanicolas On Wed, Apr 25, 2018 at 1:44 PM, George Kirikos <icann@leap.com<mailto:icann@leap.com>> wrote:
Hi folks,
During today's call, I was asked to propose new wording for some of
the questions. Using the page numbering of the April 24th redline
version as the starting point:
1. page 6, Q11:
Current Version: "Do you believe the deadline for filing Responses is
long enough? Please provide your rationale. If not, what time period
would you support, keeping in mind that the URS is supposed to operate
with rapidity?"
Proposed Language: "Have you received any feedback from respondents
that the time period to respond to a URS complaint is too low?
[as an aside, conceivably, if all we're looking for is facts/data from
the provider, rather than their opinion on policy changes, part of
this might already be captured implicitly through Q3 on page 5;
although, some respondents might have suffered through a short
deadline, without asking for an extension]
2. Page 9, Q12(c):
Current Version: "What is the procedure for assigning examiners? (i.e.
how large is the pool of examiners, is it randomly assigned; some
studies suggest a large number of cases are handled by a relatively
small number of potential examiners)"
Proposed Language:
"12(c)(i) How large is the pool of URS examiners?
12(c)(ii) Are the examiners randomly assigned, rotated, or assigned
using some other procedure (please specify)?"
[aside: 12(c)(ii) seems to have already been responded to partially,
based on the earlier wording of the question]
3. Page 13, Q10:
Current Version: "Does the Provider have clerks or other staff that
'ghost-write' decisions for Examiners, before the Examiner has made a
Determination independently, that the Examiner can simply sign their
name to if they agree with it?"
Proposed Language: [trying to be as diplomatic as I can -- my company
does own Diplomacy.com! :-) ] "To what extent does the Provider
supply Examiners with information, analysis or research concerning a
Complaint or Response that is not to be found within the Complaint or
Response itself? Does the Provider provide drafts or exemplars to the
Examiners?"
[aside: the "drafts" and "exemplars" language came from Rebecca's
suggestion in the WebEx chat today; I hope I used it appropriately,
although I'm welcome to friendly amendments; you'll recall that the
"ghost-writing" term came from Paul Keating's comment to the article
at:
http://www.circleid.com/posts/naf_caught_revising_past_udrp_decisions/
"In the case of NAF they are (with reason) suspected of having inside
clerks ghost-write opinions for delivery to the panelists." (excerpt;
full quote has been posted before on this list)
As I noted in the Webex chatroom and orally today, there had been
instances in the past where the same gibberish/nonsense appeared
verbatim across multiple decisions (in the UDRP) from different
panelists
http://www.circleid.com/posts/20100423_naf_copying_pasting_nonsense_in
to_udrp_decisions/
That article had a comment from Brett Lewis that stated (I'll quote it
in it's entirety, to not take things out of context):
"NAF decisions are drafted by in-house staffers who present the drafts
to Panelists. If the Panelists agree with the staffer's decision,
they can simply adopt the decision as their own. If the Panelists
disagree, the Panelists have to draft a new decision. There is
certainly an incentive to go along with the staff draft, but let's
give panelists a little more credit. Most panelists that is.
Staffers undoubtedly cut and paste, as all lawyers do — especially
when working for so little money. The real issue is whether the
cutting and pasting is a sign of something more sinister — bias.
Justice by factory because the trademark holder is always right.
It seems that a number of the cut and paste jobs here actually went in
favor of the Respondents. I'd need to see more before I could say
this is bias and not just sloppiness. Also, what was being cut and
pasted makes a big difference. The UDRP system is far from perfect,
and certain panelists are doing more of a hatchet job than they should
be, but when they are getting paid a nominal amount to review papers
and draft a decision, some degree of recycling is likely to happen.
Still, it wouldn't kill NAF to review the decisions before they're
published. "
Later on, in response to my question whether WIPO does the same, he
wrote (with the title of "Sausage Factory"):
"I don't believe that WIPO does it.
I'm not sure exactly how NAF does it, but they used to have staff
members draft the decisions first, then submit them to the Panelists.
The Panelists could adopt, modify, or reject the draft decisions. I'm
not sure if they do that when there's a three-member Panel, since
contested matters are generally more complex and more difficult to
decide."
and later:
"Judges often rely on law clerks to assist them to draft decisions.
The idea may not be all that different. The only issue would be
whether panelists are abdicating their responsibility to be impartial
fact finders in lieu of just signing onto a draft decision. I don't
believe that most panelists would do that, but for some, it might
happen — especially if they have a particular view of respondents that
fits the draft."
So, I hope the above helps members of this PDP understand that this
issue isn't "coming out nowhere".]
Sincerely,
George Kirikos
416-588-0269
On Tue, Apr 24, 2018 at 12:24 PM, George Kirikos <icann@leap.com<mailto:icann@leap.com>> wrote:
Thanks for the updated document, and for reflecting many of the
comments I had previously submitted:
https://mm.icann.org/pipermail/gnso-rpm-wg/2018-April/002890.html
Some additional thoughts:
A] On page 13 of the redline document, Q10 (with regards to the
"ghost-writing"), the question was not intended to be "incendiary",
as per Justine Chew's comment. The issue had been brought up in the
past by Paul Keating (a member of this PDP), in a comment to an
article in
2010 on CircleID:
http://www.circleid.com/posts/naf_caught_revising_past_udrp_decisions
/
See his comment (#2) on that page, which I'll reproduce in full:
"Jeff, Here are a few of the things that worry me about all of this:
1. No ADR provider is under contract with ICANN. There is thus
absolutely no accountability. Given NAF's history with the
authorities in connection with their having fixed the credit card
arbitration process, one wonders why this situation remains.
2. Concerning statistics (mostly about NAF) have come out regarding
repetative appointments of a select few panelists.
3. On prior occasions I have asked for corrections in NAF decisions
and have been told that it was not possible, that they would not
request panelists to do so, and they objected to any attempt on my
part to raise the issue directly with the panelists - even if copying
the other side in any correspondence.
4. I can understand the desire not to have matters continued post
decision - such would be contrary to the spirit of the UDRP.
However, to undertake a change to decisions without publication and
an audit function is simply unheard of. In the US as you know, when
a court alters an opinion it publishes notices of the modification
and it is the judges who are doing the modification. Here there is
no indication at all that any panelist made the request and no public
record keeping of the change.
Overall, the ADR providers are a law unto themselves. There is no
appeal and no accountability. WHile 4(k) allows a post-UDRP legal
action, no care was taken when writing the UDRP to investigate
whether a proper cause of action exists for such a proceeding in the
"Mutual Jurisdiction". There are no standards for panelists (one is
a traffic judge with no IP experience at all). Appointments are not
statistically random. They create their own supplemental rules.
They actively and selectively promote lines of decisions (e.g. WIPO's
Panel Guidelines). In the case of NAF they are (with reason)
suspected of having inside clerks ghost-write opinions for delivery
to the panelists. Now this. We are in a race to the bottom here.
While overall I would say that the vast majority of decisions are
correctly decided, it is worrying that registrants are forced by
contract to participate in such a system. The proper test for a
judicial system is not whether it gets it right in the easy cases but
rather it has adequate protections to ensure that the difficult ones
are treated properly. "
Given that, I thought it appropriate to ask that particular question,
so that the providers can let us know whether that ghost-writing is
actually happening or not. Frankly, I found it disturbing that it
might be happening when I first learned of that possibility back in
2010, and if it's happening, then the rules need to be strengthened.
B] With regards to the "Effect of Court Proceedings" question (page
15 of the redline document), we know that WIPO is aware of court
proceedings after UDRPs (see:
http://www.wipo.int/amc/en/domains/challenged/ , although they've
failed to update that regularly, despite new cases being brought to
their attention). Perhaps something similar exists for the URS. If
the providers aren't aware of it (and you'd think they would be,
given their "suspension' nameservers would be changed by the registry
operator to reflect a court proceeding), then the registry operators
should be asked (since they'd probably be ordered to change the
nameservers back).
C]. With regards to the final question on page 16 (running on to page
17), Sub Teams shouldn't be making "conclusions" on anything
(decisions are made by the entire membership, not subteams). As to
the merits/scope of that question, it's not been all rainbows and
unicorns at NAF. I think it's important to know whether they've
actually learned from their past, and adopted changes to reflect the
concerns in those serious legal matters. If they haven't, that it's
just been "business as usual" for the domain-related cases (after no
longer doing consumer credit disputes), then that has policy
implications. If we as a PDP simply go with the answers already
submitted, that's fine with me, but I was bending over backwards to
give them a chance to improve their answers.
Sincerely,
George Kirikos
416-588-0269
On Tue, Apr 24, 2018 at 11:32 AM, Ariel Liang <ariel.liang@icann.org<mailto:ariel.liang@icann.org>> wrote:
Hello everyone,
In preparation for tomorrow’s WG call, please be so kind to find
attached the redline document of the proposed questions to URS
Providers. The document includes comments/suggestions from WG
members, and the input/feedback to these comments/suggestions from
the Providers Sub Team (received by the deadline at 12:00 UTC on Tuesday, 24 April).
Please be so kind to review this redline document prior to the call
tomorrow (Wednesday, 25 April at 12:00 UTC). Thanks again to those
who have commented and provided input!
Best Regards,
Mary, Julie, Ariel, and Berry
From: gnso-rpm-wg <gnso-rpm-wg-bounces@icann.org<mailto:gnso-rpm-wg-bounces@icann.org>> on behalf of Julie
Hedlund <julie.hedlund@icann.org<mailto:julie.hedlund@icann.org>>
Date: Friday, April 20, 2018 at 2:43 PM
To: "gnso-rpm-wg@icann.org<mailto:gnso-rpm-wg@icann.org>" <gnso-rpm-wg@icann.org<mailto:gnso-rpm-wg@icann.org>>
Subject: [gnso-rpm-wg] Proposed agenda for RPM Working Group call on
25 April 2018 at 1200 UTC
Dear RPM PDP WG members,
Per the WG Co-Chairs, here is the proposed agenda for the Working
Group call Wednesday, 25 April 2018, scheduled for 1200 UTC (note
earlier time – calendar invite will be sent via separate email):
Proposed Agenda:
Roll call and updates to Statements of Interest Status of Questions
for Practitioners Finalize Questions for Providers Notice of agenda
for 02 May meeting
Best regards,
Mary, Julie, Ariel and Berry
_______________________________________________
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