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RE: [nc-whois] Consolidated comments on draft interim report
I'm responding on behalf of the gTLD constituency to Steve's comments,
Thomas' note, Lawrence's text, and to suggest how we proceed in the next few
days:
- Next few days: It's necessary, as Steve suggests, to have a clean text of
our draft for each constituency to review before the TF issues any
preliminary report. It's more important that we get it right, particularly
after all the time everyone has spent working on it, rather than rush to put
something out that any constituency has a question or concern about. (If
necessary, we'd rather even issue the draft at the end of the Ghana meeting
or right after, if that's what it takes to ensure everyone is comfortable
with it.) This doesn't preclude presentations to constituencies earlier, as
long as each constituency has ok'ed the text (and slides and charts, if any)
for the presentation(s).
- Steve's comments: we are in complete agreement that the mission and terms
of reference need to be reflected more accurately. it was agreed that the
TF would judge whether a review of any questions is due and, if so, what
MECHANISM to recommend for that review. and, as folks know from the call,
we also believe that the contradiction between qs 16 and 17 should be
highlighted more.
- Thomas' note on edits: We do think it is important to note that the
number of indiv. and commercial respondents is likely a small number of
overall users. It's only obvious if you reflect on all the data and each
category, but that could be said for alot of what we are writing. It's more
important to give the reader as full and clear a picture as possible. If
you like, text could say: There is no way to know what percentage the number
of indiv. and comm. respondents represent, but it is clearly a small number
of overall users." Edits welcome.
- Lawrence's qs 5-10 (Thank you for such hard work on this section!). q5:
when we look at the charts, they indicate that the 2nd use is "to determine
if there are similar names in use" Thus we should delete "and to ID who is
responsible for a name". Also, it does not seem correct to say a plurality
across all categories said the purpose shld be to ID folks for IP
infringements b/c this was a Q where people cld put down multiple responses,
ie every answer has a plurality if that's the criteria. Q6: Here there were
really only 3 choices, and protecting privacy came in third. that should be
stated more clearly, and noted that it garnered support as the most
important issue from 1 out of 5 respondents (19%)
We hope that's helpful, and we look forward to reviewing the consolidated
draft prior to release, as well as any text and charts being prepard for
presentations at Ghana.
Regards, Miriam
Miriam Sapiro
Director of International Policy
VeriSign, Inc.
1666 K Street, NW, Suite 410
Washington DC 20006
tel: 202-973-6600
fax: 202-466-9103
cell: 703-282-7117
email: msapiro@verisign.com
-----Original Message-----
From: Steve Metalitz [mailto:metalitz@iipa.com]
Sent: Wednesday, March 06, 2002 6:41 PM
To: nc-whois@dnso.org
Subject: RE: [nc-whois] Consolidated comments on draft interim report
TO: Whois Task Force members
FM: Steve Metalitz
RE: Comments on draft interim report
DT: 3/6/02
I hope that these comments are still timely and appreciate what can be done
at this point to incorporate them. I regret having to miss the conference
call yesterday so if any of these points were resolved there please ignore.
Thanks to all drafters for their excellent contributions under very short
deadlines
1. Thomas' draft circulated Saturday night (March 2)
Two general comments. First, in several places, grand totals are missing
from the charts. E.g., page 6, dealing with question 4. While the
breakdown by category is useful, the grand total including all responses can
also be significant. Second, in some charts the responses are presented in
alphabetical order rather than logical order. This may be confusing. For
example, on page 5, the responses on question 3 as to how often respondents
use Whois is presented in the following order: not
stated/daily/hourly/never/occasionally/weekly. A more logical presentation
order would be: hourly/daily/weekly/occasionally/never/not stated (or the
opposite, which is the way it was presented in the survey). Another example
is question 9 (the order should be: essential/desirable/valueless, or vice
versa).
Regarding chapter IV (questions 16 & 17): I gather this was discussed at
length on the call and I see that Thomas has proposed some new language
which I will review below rather than providing my comments on the
original text.
2. Introduction (draft circulated by Marilyn)
Again, I know this was discussed on the call and according to Thomas'
post-call memorandum, approved in full. Did anyone have any concerns about
the characterization of the Task Force terms of reference in the second
paragraph under "History and Mission"? There is a close quote at the end of
this paragraph but I don't know from what document the quote is taken. I
believe the following might be a more complete summary, based on the
archival material already posted in
http://www.dnso.org/clubpublic/nc-whois/Arc00/msg00193.html and
http://www.dnso.org/clubpublic/nc-whois/Arc00/msg00190.html: "to consult
with the community with regard to establishing whether a review of ANY
QUESTIONS RELATING TO ICANN's WHOIS policy is due, AND IF SO TO RECOMMEND A
MECHANISM FOR SUCH A REVIEW." I also think that this should not be
presented as a quote since in fact it is a paraphrase.
3. Chapter II
I fully support what Laurence posted on this prior to the call. I will work
with her on responding to the points Thomas makes in the first paragraph of
his "caveats" from his post-call memo. Thomas is correct (in his second
caveat) that the numbers in this submission are taken from the October 2001
tabulation and need to be conformed to the grand totals as presented in the
interim report (such grand totals were not presented in the March 2 draft,
as noted above). I am not sure about the political sensitivity involved in
his third caveat regarding the wording of the text relating to question 8.
The phrase "original gTLD" is meant to refer to .com/net/org; the data
elements made available to the public in Whois are in fact slightly
different in some of the new gTLDs, so if this phrase is objectionable we
should either state ".com/net/org" or else come up with a different phrase.
4. Chapter III (gTLD Registry redline text sent after the conference
call):
At several points, reference is made to percentages drawn from the grand
totals (e.g., regarding question 15). None of these grand totals appears in
the document circulated by Thomas, so they should be added in accordance
with the first general comment in the preceding section.
Regarding question 14a, the second line should read, "supported centralizing
ACCESS TO the Whois databases..." (new language in CAPS). Clearly the
databases themselves need not necessarily be centralized. In the same
paragraph, the second sentence (beginning on the fourth line) should begin,
"The categories of respondents IN which THE LARGEST MINORITY rejected
centralized access [most significantly] were...". (New language in CAPS,
deletions in [brackets].) None of these categories rejected centralized
access.
5. Chapter IV
I propose the following revisions (using the same conventions as above re
additions and deletions) to the draft Thomas circulated this afternoon. I
just do not think that the responses to question 17(a) are ambiguous. The
survey recites the current gTLD policies and then asks, "Do you think that
THESE PROVISIONS should be maintained in the gTLD environment?" (emphasis
added) I believe the responses are quite clear, if quite contradictory to
the answers given to 16. I do not have any disagreement with the bottom
line but I think we are better off noting the contradiction rather than
saying that an unambiguous response is ambiguous. I know that not everyone
agrees with this reading and I am comfortable noting the different readings
in the text of the report.
Begin edit:
Based on preliminary analysis, the Task Force believes that
cross-cateGory consensus among respondentS can be identified with respect
to the following points:
- When asked whether registrars should be allowed to engage in resale or
marketing use of whois data, respondent appear to favor opt-in policies,
or not allowing such use at all, over opt-out policies or
unconditionally allowing such use.
- Respondents APPEAR TO agree that CURRENT bulk acCess provisions should be
maintained in
the gTLD environment, AND THAT THEY SHOULD BE EXTENDED TO APPLY TO OTHER
TLDS.
-[Respondents agree that bulk access provisions should be extended to
apply to other TLDs.]
As opposed to these rather clear BUT CONTRADICTORY signals, there is a
strong signal of
indecision when respondents were asked whether or not to change the bulk
access provisions. Free-form responses of those who suggested such a
change mirror the result from the "resale and marketing" question, and
favor opt-in or stricter policies.
Since THERE IS AT LEAST SOME CLEAR EVIDENCE (IN THE RESPONSES TO QUESTION
16) THAT the kind of third party data access policy favored by respondents
appears to be different from the one currently implemented in the
Registrar Accreditation Agreement, a review of that policy which keeps
the survey´s results in mind may be in order.
End edit
I also suggest the following edit for clarity in the first sentence of the
discussion of question 16.
With the exception of the "other" and "not stated" categories of
respondents, [no] PROHIBITING resale or marketing use is preferred over an
opt-in
approach to such use.
Finally, in the second paragraph of the discussion of question 17d, I
suggest the following insertion:
The evaluation of A SELECTION OF the free-form responses.....
I hope this is helpful and, as noted above, still timely. Will a "final"
draft be circulated for review?
Steve Metalitz
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