Dear all,
I agree with Paul that among the main questions for us to come up with a Frame of Interpretation of the Human Rights in the ICANN mission would be:
- What substance we see in the phrase human rights inside ICANN Mission?
- When, if ever, ICANN should give that substance (whatever it may be) effect?
I can’t say they are the only meaningful questions since there will be subsequent questions. But let’s start with the first question: I think that to address it, we may begin by giving practical easy cases.
The protection of the registrant data is one of the most obvious case of human right that falls in the ICANN mission. This may also affect the ICANN contract with registries/registrars
------------------------------------------------------------ ----------------- Tijani BEN JEMAAExecutive DirectorMediterranean Federation of Internet Associations (FMAI)Phone: +216 98 330 114------------------------------------------------------------ ----------------- Le 4 sept. 2016 à 18:24, Paul Rosenzweig <paul.rosenzweig@redbranchconsulting.com > a écrit :______________________________Dear FarzanehOf course your questions are meaningful. Indeed, the ONLY two meaningful questions in this discussion are a) what substance we see in the phrase human rights? And b) When, if ever, ICANN should give that substance (whatever it may be) effect?Your questions clearly go to the later of these two issues. Members of the group may disagree on the answers we reach, but you’re asking questions that have real meaning – whatever anyone may say to the contrary.PaulPaul RosenzweigVOIP: +1 (202) 738-1739From: ws2-hr-bounces@icann.org [mailto:ws2-hr-bounces@icann.org ] On Behalf Of farzaneh badii
Sent: Sunday, September 4, 2016 11:56 AM
To: Kavouss Arasteh <kavouss.arasteh@gmail.com>
Cc: ws2-hr@icann.org
Subject: Re: [Ws2-hr] When should ICANN uphold human rights?Calling something "not meaningful" is very easy. But it does not devalue its merits, fortunately. Please provide a rationale for why the questions are not meaningful. I don't have to consult with the co-chairs to discuss the questions here. If the group feels that it is unnecessary to discuss these questions they can simply not respond, if they feel we should re-formulate them, then we can.The questions are to clarify what we mean by ICANN should not become a content regulator. The discussions that can arise responding to the question and sub-questions which I have posted can lead us towards a more tangible understanding of what we mean when we say ICANN should not become a content regulator and should not go out of its scope and mission when upholding human rights.BestFarzanehOn 4 September 2016 at 17:34, Kavouss Arasteh <kavouss.arasteh@gmail.com> wrote:Dear All,I do not understand the meaning and purpose of these questions.Perhaps the author of the questions could consult other two co chairs and come up with meaningfull text.We can not send out these questions at allReagrdsKavouss2016-09-04 14:25 GMT+02:00 farzaneh badii <farzaneh.badii@gmail.com>:Hi all,Sorry for sending out the questions late. I wanted to provide a gist of what we discussed during our call and then provide the questions but unfortunately, we still do not have the recording. Below are some questions for the group to discuss:Considering ICANN's scope and mission, when should ICANN uphold human rights?- In its consideration to enter into contracts with registries and registrars? (for example, when they are considering a new gTLD application)- During the contractual relationship with the registries and the registrars by obligating the registries and registrars to enforce human rights?Best--Farzaneh______________________________
_________________
Ws2-hr mailing list
Ws2-hr@icann.org
https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/ws2-hr --Farzaneh_________________
Ws2-hr mailing list
Ws2-hr@icann.org
https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/ws2-hr