Tony and all,
My personal opinion is that this is THE main overarching issue since
the beginning. One that has been, in my opinion, overlooked and poorly
considered.
I endorse the letter in its general terms, but would like to see
the specific wording.
Jaime Wagner
jaime@corp.plugin.com.br
Cel (51) 8126-0916
Fax (51) 3123-1708
De:
owner-ispcp@gnso.icann.org [mailto:owner-ispcp@gnso.icann.org] Em nome de Tonyarholmes@btinternet.com
Enviada em: quinta-feira, 1 de julho de 2010 08:27
Para: ispcp@icann.org
Assunto: [ispcp] New gTLD overarching issue - malicious conduct
All
members of the ISPCP
It
has been proposed within the CSG Executive that the CSG leadership send a joint
letter from the three constituencies expressing major concern over the
overarching issue of malicious conduct related to the introduction of
gTLDS. As discussed during the Brussels meeting one of the problems is that the high security zone program
is purely voluntary. The IPC in particular has said there still
needs to be some way to raise an objection that a particular application that
does not meet the "voluntary" program poses real problems, the
example that’s been used is .kids.
The other view that appears to be held by ICANN is that malicious
conduct as an overarching issues is now done.
It’s worth stating that the HSTLD advisory group is still
working hard (although down to a very small group of people) on some
fundamental principles that still have to work out (like who these rules would
apply to (registry, registrar, registrant). But that does not take away the
concerns raised in some quarters that this is an optional program, is not
tied to the new GTLD rollout, and even whether it will actually make a TLD more
secure.
The issue I would like your feedback on is whether it’s
appropriate for the ISPCP executive to add their support to this letter. A
number of times during the Brussels meeting I heard ISPs making the point that
further delays to the gTLD program would not be supported, so there is a
balance to strike. Certainly if its argued that the issues around malicious
conduct are still unresolved, then effectively we are accepting the need for
additional delay.
Please provide feedback and comments on whether the ISPCP should
offer support for the view that the malicious conduct issue is not resolved to
a satisfactory level and more work is required before ICANN can push ahead with
the gTLD program.
If as a result of your response we require a conference
call to discuss this further, that will be arranged. However this is urgent and
requires a quick answer.
Many thanks
Tony