Agree Georges.
We don’t need a percent figure. We can simply observe that ICANN needs specific info for data collection/oversight & outline those required fields.
Cyntia King
O: +1 816.633.7647
C: +1 818.209.6088

From: GNSO-RPM-WG <gnso-rpm-wg-bounces@icann.org> On Behalf Of Nahitchevansky, Georges
Sent: Monday, February 10, 2020 1:37 PM
To: Greg Shatan <gregshatanipc@gmail.com>; gnso-rpm-wg <gnso-rpm-wg@icann.org>
Subject: Re: [GNSO-RPM-WG] The 7% Solution for URS Rationale [was: ACTIONS & NOTES: RPM PDP WG 08 August 2018]
Thank you Greg. I was looking for that email and went back through what I had reviewed. The bottom line is that of the 103 cases that had been marked as having no rational, there were 45 that included enough to know what the case had been about and the rationale. That meant that 7% just reiterated the standard and ruled in favor of a party with nothing to deduce the rationale. Of those 7%, though, a number of cases involved domain names that were based on a well-known trademark and it would not take much to understand that a domain name that was simply BRAND + gTLD likely involved cybersquatting. So in my view while there are some cases that had no rationale, I do not believe we are talking overall about cases that involved rulings with no explanations regarding domain names that primarily involved a generic word with a gTLD. Most of the 58 cases (or 103) that arguably had no specific rationale involved domain names that related to trademarks that are known, which again suggests something about the ruling. Put another way, there is a conceptual difference between a case that involves a domain name based on a well-known brand such as <cocacola.beverage> and one that involves a generic word such as <fashion.clothes>. If the cases that have no articulated rationale primarily involved the latter type of domains, I would be much more concerned. But if they mostly relate to known brands, I’m not sure that this suggests that there were errors committed by the panelist. Also, I do not believe that the 58 decisions at issue actually resulted in any appeals, which does suggest that perhaps the decisions were not unfounded.
In any event, rather than go back and forth about whether we are talking about 7% or 13% of cases without a stated rationale, I think the solution is to just say that there were several cases that had no clearly stated rationale without getting into percentages. After all, we are more or less in agreement that close to 90% of the cases had articulated rationale and that there should be some tweak to address the minimum of what a URS decision should provide.
Georges Nahitchevansky
From: GNSO-RPM-WG <gnso-rpm-wg-bounces@icann.org> On Behalf Of Greg Shatan
Sent: Monday, February 10, 2020 1:42 PM
To: gnso-rpm-wg <gnso-rpm-wg@icann.org>
Subject: [GNSO-RPM-WG] The 7% Solution for URS Rationale [was: ACTIONS & NOTES: RPM PDP WG 08 August 2018]
All,
Here is the Georges Nahitchevansky email that was referred to in last week's discussion of the percentage of URS decisions that lacked a rationale. There was a subsequent discussion, so I recommend going back to the list if you want to see the follow-up.
Greg
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Nahitchevansky, Georges <ghn@kilpatricktownsend.com>
Date: Thu, Aug 9, 2018 at 3:27 PM
Subject: Re: [gnso-rpm-wg] ACTIONS & NOTES: RPM PDP WG 08 August 2018
To: Tushnet, Rebecca <rtushnet@law.harvard.edu>, Ariel Liang <ariel.liang@icann.org>, gnso-rpm-wg@icann.org <gnso-rpm-wg@icann.org>
Rebecca:
I do not disagree with the notion that we should discuss what a decision should contain, but I don’t think we have a consensus as to what that should be in the URS context (given the pricing of URS proceedings). Moreover, a review of the URS cases makes your 13% number and comment of “significant due process and implementation issues” point questionable. At NAF for example, there were 827 cases that that your research assistants reviewed. I found a total of about 103 that your team flagged as having no articulated decisions. I would agree that in 58 cases the decisions lacked details, but in 45 cases there were details that sufficiently let you know what the case was about and the basis of the resolution. I am sure we can argue about these 45 cases and whether they should say more, but ultimately we are really only talking about 58 cases that actually do not have any specific details and just provide the standard and a resolution (although I note that most of these cases involve domain names based on fairly well known marks such as NISSAN, DATSUN, TEXACO, BLOOMBERG, BNP PARIBAS etc., so you pretty much know what trademark was involved.). In all, we are really talking about 7% of the cases that have no details, which is not significant.
Again, we can discuss what the decisions should provide, but I don’t think we ought to be qualifying this as a “significant” issue per se (as 93% of them have details). There are other issues being considered in the URS review that have better percentage numbers as an issue that are viewed as not being significant per se. The point is that the URS looks to be working appropriately and there are probably some tweaks and refinements needed but this is not sky is falling issue.
From: gnso-rpm-wg <gnso-rpm-wg-bounces@icann.org> On Behalf Of Tushnet, Rebecca
Sent: Thursday, August 9, 2018 1:22 PM
To: Ariel Liang <ariel.liang@icann.org>; gnso-rpm-wg@icann.org
Subject: Re: [gnso-rpm-wg] ACTIONS & NOTES: RPM PDP WG 08 August 2018
My apologies for missing the meeting. Comment on the big document:
This is currently only covered under Defenses but I would put it for discussion/recommendations under 2. Examiners’ Guide/3. Other Issues because it goes beyond defenses: Decisions should contain basic information, including what the trademark is, what the finding of abuse is and/or what findings are on any defenses—13% of decisions did not, and this raises significant due process and implementation issues.
From: gnso-rpm-wg <gnso-rpm-wg-bounces@icann.org> on behalf of Ariel Liang <ariel.liang@icann.org>
Sent: Wednesday, August 8, 2018 3:56:54 PM
To: gnso-rpm-wg@icann.org
Subject: [gnso-rpm-wg] ACTIONS & NOTES: RPM PDP WG 08 August 2018
Dear All,
Please see below the action items and notes captured by staff from the RPM PDP WG call held on 08 August 2018 (17:00-18:30 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 recording. The recording, AC chat, and attendance records are posted on the wiki at: https://community.icann.org/x/uwNpBQ
Best Regards,
Ariel
Ariel Xinyue Liang
GNSO Policy Support Specialist
Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN)
==
ACTION ITEMS:
NOTES:
Review Agenda/Statements of Interest
General Comment on the Super Consolidated URS Topics Table Document
Limited filing period (page 3)
Administrative Review (page 3-4)
500-word Complaint limit (page 4-5)
· On 500-word Complaint Limit - Practitioners' survey results were split (out of 12, 5 agree it's sufficient, 4 disagree); results included feedback from some that the word limit was too low: "arbitrary and often insufficient" and "should be slightly increased".
· One member said he understands and generally agrees with the decision not to suggest an expansion of the word limit, he wonders if there aren't situations (multi- domain challenges, etc.) where a Complainant or Respondent might be given the opportunity to request an expansion. This point can be captured for decisional phase.
· Another member suggested that perhaps providers can provide stats on the average word length of complaints, to see how close to the 500 words they are at present. (i.e. a table of distributions, e.g. 10% under 200 words, 20% between 201 and 300, etc.)
Amending the Complaint in light of GDPR/Temp Spec (page 5-6)
SMD Files (page 6-7)
Other Topics (page 7-8)
Duration of response period (Page 11)
Examiners Guide (page 13)
Duration of Suspension Period & Review of Implementation (page 21-23)
Other topics (page 23-24)
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