Fwd: Fwd: [New gTLD RG] Community objection - health
Resending at 17:33, original sent to na-discuss@ at 13:10. -------- Original Message -------- Subject: Fwd: [New gTLD RG] Community objection - health Date: Thu, 07 Mar 2013 13:10:54 -0800 From: Eric Brunner-Williams <ebw@abenaki.wabanaki.net> Reply-To: ebw@abenaki.wabanaki.net Organization: wampumpeag To: na-discuss@atlarge-lists.icann.org All, I may have missed this, but I didn't observe anyone provide to the NA-Discuss list subscribers a link to the correspondence by Antonine Geissbuhler of the International Medical Informatics Association, on the 20th of last month. In that note [1] Mr or Ms Geissbuhler wrote to inform the New gTLD RT that an Overview [2] and Objections table [3] had been posted to the ICANN site for review. Please see the links in the footnotes for the originals. In the Overview, in the sixth paragraph, its authors write that "The community has argued to ICANN and the GAC that .health should not be attributed until a broad-based consultation of the community has taken place, and the rights, rules and responsibilities for the operation of the domain had been elaborated. It is vital that there is at least one trusted place on the Internet for health. In the same way that the Internet is a global public good, .health can be considered as a global asset for health." Several frequent contributors to the NA-Discuss list have argued to the contrary, in effect that: [a] .health should be irrevocably delegated to a private, for-profit actor before the "rights, rules and responsibilities" have been worked out. [b] No necessity, or even competitive utility exists for the existence of even "one trusted place on the Internet for health." [c] Unlike the Internet, which is a global public good, .health must be a private asset of a for-profit actor. I've reviewed the registration policies of the five applicants for "health" in the Latin and Han scripts and find them more similar to the policies of open registries than those of socially responsible registries I've worked with in the past -- .museum, .coop, and of course, .cat. Unlike those arguing for [a] I see only harm to the public interest in delegation before adequate rule determination. Having worked for the creation of sponsored, and then community-based registry types, within Working Group C (1998-2000), with Louis Touton, ICANN's first Vice-President, Secretary, and General Counsel of ICANN, and subsequently with the .aero, .coop and .museum projects, and the .cat project for which I was the CTO of application record, and as CTO of CORE, which provides back-end services for .museum and .cat, I see not just a compelling utility, but stark necessity for at least one namespace with policies that transform the public trust in tangibles related to public health to a public trust in the intangibles related to public health. Unlike those arguing for [b] I see only harm to the public interest in the absence of any "place on the Internet" where the intangibles related to public health can be trusted. I came to "the Internet" and via the exercise of writing, inter alia, in 1984, the XPG/1 socket specification. Not long afterwards I'd the honor of managing one of SRI's larger computer facilities, in the same building (in fact directly over), Jake Feinler's shop, which carried out the Network Information Center function. I've contributed to the IETF (as has Avri Doria), the W3C, the 3rd version of the XPG specification (now The Single Unix Specification), and so on. I've no doubt that the Internet is mostly a global public good. I'd like to see more of it in Indian Country, and I liked it better before the Commercial Exchange Agreement and the privatization of the NIC function, but on the whole, it remains "a global public good". Unlike those arguing for [c] I see only harm to the public interest in making the "Internet of Public Health" the monopoly of a for-profit, private actor. There is still time for thoughtful discourse on the objections to the five applications for "health" in the Latin and Han scripts. Obviously, had I been elected to the office I ran for in the last election I would not be abstaining on this question. Eric Brunner-Williams [1] http://mm.icann.org/pipermail/newgtldrg/2013-February/000326.html [2] https://community.icann.org/download/attachments/40930482/Health+Community+O... [3] https://community.icann.org/download/attachments/40930482/Health+Community+O...
There is still time for thoughtful discourse on the objections to the five applications for "health" in the Latin and Han scripts.
Actually, that's not totally accurate. The objection to the IDN application has failed to be passed to the ALAC because it did not receive the support of three of At-Large's five regions. So there *cannot* be any At-Large objection against the IDN application. Debate continues on the other four objections, pending ALAC consideration. As an elected ALAC rep I continue to monitor the issue here; I appreciate both sides and continue to frame my position and the way I will vote. I refuse to be dogmatic in either direction.
Obviously, had I been elected to the office I ran for in the last election I would not be abstaining on this question.
Proverbs 14:30 - Evan
participants (2)
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Eric Brunner-Williams -
Evan Leibovitch