> Perhaps it is because we have had an
intense week trying to wrap this up.
> But I thought Lutz had submitted this recommendation
some time ago. And on
> the last conference call, he clarified that
> this was not a centralized database but rather a
centralized interface. And
> his recommendation referenced the consumer research
study which
> I also called out and acknowledged the linkage. So
it is also a surprise to
> me that we are not all in ageement.
>
> From my perspective, this is not about Thick or Thin
Whois data. It is
> about alleviatng the difficulties that absolutely
everyone encounters in
> doing
> Whois lookups. For those of us involved in the
domain name industry, we are
> more familiar with navigating. But I have to say it
is cumbersome and
> usually requires several steps to find the registrant
information.
> Lynn
>
>
> -------- Original Message --------
> Subject: Re: [Rt4-whois] No agreement on Lutz's
recommendations
> [SEC=UNCLASSIFIED]
> From: Kathy Kleiman <
kathy@kathykleiman.com>
> Date: Fri, December 02, 2011 11:39 am
> To:
rt4-whois@icann.org
>
> Completely disagree guys, and am writing an extensive
message. I have to say
> that two days after we were due to report out, I am
> surprised/concerned/upset to be debating substantive
policy matters.
>
> But the fact is that the idea of Thick WHOIS
database for existing thin
> registries (and all, there are Four of them, have we
ever discussed that
> fact?) is **already being debated**. They recognize
that there may be
> intended and possibly considerable unintended
consequences of the process.
> Am reviewing their work and will share shortly.
>
> Suffice to say, I think we have leapt headlong into
policy... Kathy
>
> << Yes - there is not a difference in privacy
by implementing a centralized
> interface to all the existing Whois pages. All the
interface does is
> provide a single point of access to the same data
versus multiple points of
> access (that would still be functional).
>
> Lynn
>
>