Brendler, Beau wrote:
Ross, I'm not so anxious to pick up torches, but there are new people coming on board in the NA RALO community who don't have the benefit of your years of experience as a senior executive at a registrar dealing with this issue, so that's why I posted this here -- in hopes of hearing something from new faces in the room, groups representing users, consumers, etc.
I guess I fit into this category. A little over a year ago I had nothing to do with ICANN. Thanks to Jacob's initiative, a better (but far from complete) understanding of the issues, and a knowledgeable and generally welcoming bunch of colleagues, I'm in a little deeper now. :-) And while my ALS's membership is reasonably technically inclined, I'd say that the proportion of them that own domains is definitely a minority (though higher than the general public). We have not done an extensive survey of our ALS's members but the issue has come up at the executive/board level and some informal user group discussions. Generally I have heard agreement with what Beau stated as the Webwatch position:
Oversimply stated, we are interested in seeing a compromise that would allow a consumer to use accurate WHOIS data to help determine the credibility of a Web site with which the consumer is about to do business, while not compromising, say, the right of Burmese citizens to create Web sites to describe the conditions within their country without fear of being tracked down and harmed by their government via WHOIS data.
To be more specific, WHOIS accuracy is a non-issue -- it must exist -- what is at issue is the level of public access to that accurate informaion. I would suggest that any domain owned by a government agency or for-profit corporation must be public (just as corporate registration information is already public). Non-profits and individuals should be able to enable some kind of privacy while allowing appropriate legitimate access (ie, I would not want the above scenario to give said Burmese citizens the ability to engage in personal libel, or publishing secrets of others, with impunity). To extend this to the "intended" purpose of TLDs, I could live with all of .com, .int and .gov being required to be public, while .org could allow surrogates under proper circumstances. CCTLDs that use .com. or .org. subdomains an easily make similar distinctions. I agree that study at a policy level is pointless -- the facts and opinions on all sides are well known and it's time for a political decision that takes a stand with the given information. The only required further study would IMO be regarding the business and mechanical implementation of the kinds of proxy / escrow / whatever models are required to allow a balance of privacy and accountability. Even unlisted telephone numbers are on record at the telco and are accessible under certain well-defined legal circumstances. There are other non-Internet examples -- such as access to auto license-plate registration information -- that indicate reasonable societal compromises between privacy and accountability. We're not the first ones with this dilemma. - Evan