Whether there is perception or fact of ICANN or others working at odds, I think we all need ot figure out how we can best work together towards our common purpose. Sometimes if someone comes in with theri perspective, perhaps new to this group, or not aware of particular histories, they become the object of a criticicm which traces to other forces and actors. That does not mean their perspective is not valid. I am not arguing for equal validity of all perspectives either. But we do need agood mechanism for introducing people to a cooperative culture with some history. Also, we need room to revisit past perceptions and decisions. I believe Darlene has made a very important set of points in how we should engage here and the tone we should set. Ths is important for the work we want to do and for the future participation of others. As a newcomer to this discourse I didnt come in with blind faith in the goodness or effectiveness of all parties, nor am I unaware of some entities potentially being used to serve as window dressing. With such awareness we can take pains to make sure we do something of value. I didnt come here to feel important, I came here because these policy questions are important, and we should use as many mechanisms as we can to promote the public interest. Anyone who doesnt think this can be an effective locus of activity would do well to direct their attentions elsewhere, I am sure. But for the most part we should endeavor toward civility and welcoming others to the work. Michael -Michael On 4/18/07, John L <johnl@iecc.com> wrote:
Very true but aren't we supposed to be encouraging participation rather than throwing up our own blocks to it?
Nobody's throwing up blocks to participation. If the organizations in question had applied to the NCUC where they belong, they would have been accepted months if not years ago.
The by-laws clearly state, "For example, an 'Umbrella NGO' where such an NGO's organizational members are themselves controlled by and for the benefit of individual Internet users would fulfil the criterion."
That's not the bylaws, that part of the letter is JJ's opinion of what he thinks the bylaws should mean. The actual bylaws language is quoted in the middle of page 2 of his letter. You can and should read the full bylaws at http://www.icann.org/general/bylaws.htm
This is a good example of ICANN working at odds with the interest of at large users. The ALAC is supposed to represent individual end users, not people who think they represent the interests of end users.* The idea of all the constituencies is that each represents some group of interested people. There is a long history of special interests vs. public interest at ICANN, with the public interest all too often getting the short end of the stick. For example, today you can read about a bunch of price increases by major GTLD registries that have no justification other than that the first one was bundled into the settlement of a lawsuit against ICANN.
To the extent that the ALAC fills up with groups that belong elsewhere, the already tenuous influence of individuals is further diluted. If you think that individuals deserve their place at the table, this is a problem you should be concerned about.
If the staff had supported us and said a year ago, hey, the bylaws say you're applying to the wrong place, go to the NCUC, that would have been the end of it. Instead, we've been subjected to a year of appeals and ombudsman and now the general council torturing the language to futher dilute what little influence individual users have.
Regards, John Levine, johnl@iecc.com, Primary Perpetrator of "The Internet for Dummies", Information Superhighwayman wanna-be, http://www.johnlevine.com, ex-Mayor "More Wiener schnitzel, please", said Tom, revealingly.
* - which opens the door to anyone from Sympatico and Road Runner ("we're deeply concerned about the interests of our millions of individual ISP customers") to trademark lawyers ("we're fighting to keep individual users from being confused about the valuable brand names they know and trust"). Let's not go there.
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