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RE: [council] NCUC's position to Whois TF report



Hello Chun,

Thanks for opening up some discussion on the WHOIS report.  Your comments on 
privacy will be recorded formally in any report that is approved by the Council 
for consideration by the ICANN Board.

My understanding of the progress on WHOIS to date is:

(1) A task force was formed in July 2001 to examine whether the WHOIS policy 
should be updated

(2) The task force used a questionnaire to guide it.  This questionnaire did 
include questions about privacy.  
See the June 2002 report at:
http://www.dnso.org/dnso/notes/whoisTF/20020625.TFwhois-report.htm

(3) The task force found that there were a number of areas where WHOIS policy 
could be improved.

(4) The task force identified two issues to concentrate on initially:
- accuracy (the security and stability committee also identified this as 
important)
- bulk access for marketing purposes (which is the first step to improve 
privacy)

(5) The current report for discussion at the GNSO meeting on 20 Feb 2003 
contains some recommendations relating to these two specific issues (nearly two 
years since the beginning of the task force work)

(6) A new GNSO policy development process came into force in December 2002
-see http://www.icann.org/general/bylaws.htm#AnnexA

(7) The WHOIS task force as its last act is producing a set of issues reports 
under the new policy development process.  I believe that one of them is in the 
area of privacy.

(8) It is up to the GNSO council to determine which issues reports are worthy 
of initiating the policy development process, and it is up to the GNSO to 
determine whether to create new task forces for this purpose.

I understand that the WHOIS task force does recognise that privacy is a major 
issue.

I know that Registrars believe that the free port 43 WHOIS service provided by 
registrars is being abused, and that registrant's privacy via this service 
needs to be protected.  Other countries (e.g Australia) have taken action to 
limit the amount of information provided via the public WHOIS service (in 
Australia only name and email address is provided publicly).

The privacy area is an important and complex one, but I personally think it is 
worth addressing in the policy development process.

I recommend that the non-commercial constituency:
(a) contribute to the privacy issues report under development in the WHOIS task 
force
and/or
(b) if not satisfied with the issues report created by the WHOIS task force, 
create its own issues report and submit to the Council for consideration

I believe that you will get support from the council for the privacy issue to 
be examined for policy development.

I do not believe that it is possible to solve all WHOIS problems at once.  This 
approach is one of the reasons that the WHOIS task force process has taken so 
long.

I believe we will achieve better outcomes, by breaking done the problem into 
some specific issues with focussed policy development on each issue.  Accuracy 
and privacy are different topics, but certainly I believe that accuracy will be 
improved when the protection for privacy is improved.  The sooner we can start 
further work on the privacy issue the better overall outcome we will achieve.

The ICANN Board could decide to delay the implementation of the accuracy 
recommendations until after the privacy issue is addressed.  For example the 
ICANN Board recommended that Verisign delay the introduction of the WLS service 
until the redemption grace period process was implemented.  This does seem to 
be sensible as registrars have encountered some teething problems in the 
introduction of the redemption grace period by Verisign, as would be expected 
in the introduction of any new policy.
Given that the accuracy recommendation is likely to require development work 
from registrars, and there are likely to be teething problems - I believe it is 
sensible to work on the privacy issues while accuracy is being improved.  It 
will actually provide an incentive for groups such as registrars and the 
non-commercial constituency to work together to suggest policy improvements to 
better address the privacy concern.

I believe that the Council itself should not withhold approval of one set of 
recommendations merely because policy development in other areas is not 
complete.  If we do that the GNSO will never be able to produce timely outcomes 
- one of the main reasons for ICANN reform.

I look forward to more in-depth discussion on the privacy issue at the ICANN 
meeting in Rio.

Regards,
Bruce Tonkin




> -----Original Message-----
> From: Chun Eung Hwi [mailto:ehchun@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
> Sent: Wednesday, February 19, 2003 1:07 PM
> To: council@xxxxxxxx
> Cc: discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Subject: [council] NCUC's position to Whois TF report
> 
> 
> Dear NC members and Whois TF members,
> 
> 
> We, NCUC, were recently told that Ruchika Agrawal, our 
> representative for
> Whois TF, expressed her dissending opinion on the TF's accuracy policy
> recommendation because the TF has not only failed to 
> adequately address
> privacy issues, but also failed to reflect several suggestions made by
> commenters.
> 
> We, as NCUC, confirm that her position is definitely representing our
> constituency's official position and hope that such an 
> opinion could be
> deliberately and cautiously noted and taken into account so as to make
> more mature and consensus policy on whois issue. The privacy 
> concern on
> whois policy, one of the major concerns for our constituency, has
> frequently been expressed in our members' public comments and 
> even in NC
> conferences. Therefore, if this concern is not to be sorted out
> appropriately, we could hardly endorse such policy. We hope that TF
> members would think over this aspect once more deliberately 
> because now
> privacy issue is truly a significant concern of all domain 
> name users and
> it is closely related with very real threats to people's lives.
> 
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Chun Eung Hwi
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> Chun Eung Hwi
> General Secretary, PeaceNet | phone:     (+82) 2- 2166-2216
> Seoul Yangchun P.O.Box 81   |   pcs:     (+82) 019-259-2667 
> Seoul, 158-600, Korea       | eMail:   ehchun@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx   
> ------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> 
>