Hi, Jennifer.

 

Please also include the following addition:

 

ICANN reportedly will be adding supplemental questions and criteria on DNS abuse to the registrar accreditation application (sounds promising). Please provide SSR2 with information about this including: the final or draft supplemental text; how ICANN will assess the answers; whether and how the answers will factor into ICANN’s decision to approve or deny an application; how ICANN will track and hold an approved registrar accountable for the registrar’s statements in the application regarding how the applicant intends to address DNS abuse as a registrar; and whether ICANN has plans to add similar supplemental DNS abuse questions and criteria to registrar contract renewals (why, why not).

 

Thanks,

Denise

 

 

From: Ssr2-review <ssr2-review-bounces@icann.org> on behalf of Jennifer Bryce <jennifer.bryce@icann.org>
Date: Tuesday, May 5, 2020 at 2:41 PM
To: SSR2 <ssr2-review@icann.org>
Subject: Re: [Ssr2-review] ICANN Organization Blog on DNS Abuse

 

Dear Russ,

 

Thanks for your note. We’ll now share the questions with the relevant SMEs within the org and will provide the review team with an expected response delivery date as soon as we have this information. Per the standard process on requests for information, we’ll track the request/response as an action item on the wiki.

 

Best,

Jennifer

 

From: Ssr2-review <ssr2-review-bounces@icann.org> on behalf of Russ Housley <housley@vigilsec.com>
Date: Tuesday, May 5, 2020 at 10:12 AM
To: ICANN SSR2 <ssr2-review@icann.org>
Subject: Re: [Ssr2-review] ICANN Organization Blog on DNS Abuse

 

I would be interested in the answers to these questions.  What is needed for staff to get the Q&A process started?

 

Russ

 

 




From: Ssr2-review <ssr2-review-bounces@icann.org> on behalf of SSR2 <ssr2-review@icann.org>
Reply-To: Denise Michel <denisemichel@fb.com>
Date: Wednesday, April 29, 2020 at 1:36 PM
To: "danko.jevtovic@board.icann.org" <danko.jevtovic@board.icann.org>, SSR2 <ssr2-review@icann.org>
Subject: Re: [Ssr2-review] ICANN Organization Blog on DNS Abuse

 

Thanks for sharing, the ICANN blog, Danko.  It’s highly relevant to SSR2 work, as well as to what several SSR2 members are doing in our day jobs to stop domain abuse.

 

On the whole, the blog is an expression of intent to act. While welcomed, there are no specifics nor a time table for when the internal and community actions will occur. This raises several questions related to SSR2 work for ICANN Staff to answer (and a couple for the Board), which are listed below.

 

Would SSR2 be able to get expedited answers to these? It would be useful for all concerned if we could factor this into our SSR2 work.

 

Thanks

Denise

 

 

1) The blog says: " the domain names and the data collected by the system will be shared with parties who are in a position to take action, such as registrars and registries, and in some cases with national and international law enforcement organizations."

 

2) What distinguishes ICANN's participation in the face of the pandemic from how they've participated in the past? 

 

3) The blog states (the obvious) that ICANN isn’t a regulator of Internet content, but it doesn’t address ICANN’s public interest remit. Multiple entities have asked ICANN to better govern the manner in which domain names are registered, and now especially, everyone is asking ICANN to hold contracted parties to greater accountability to prevent domains from being registered by malicious actors, especially for pandemic-related fraud and abuse. This requires greater scrutiny during the registration process. 

- will ICANN move to ensure domain name registrant data is validated? Or at least implement cross-field validation?

- will ICANN put in place an Acceptable Use Policy that applies specifically to parties that register large numbers of domains, that requires registrants to apply for (and be validated for) bulk registration services? Further, will ICANN put in place an obligation to distinguish domain names registered by legal entities from those registered by

natural persons, classify parties that use bulk registration services as legal entities, and require unredacted access to the registration data of legal entities?

- will ICANN maintain and publish a current list of validated bulk registrants (who are from above defined as not natural persons)?

- will ICANN disallow registration transactions that involve large numbers of random-looking algorithmic domain names? 

-  will ICANN disallow, for a period of one year, the re-registration of any bulk-registered domain name that has been used in a criminal cyberattack?

 




On Apr 21, 2020, at 11:44 AM, danko.jevtovic@board.icann.org wrote:

 

ICANN Organization Blog on DNS Abuse

 

 

Danko