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[council] Report on public suggestions of further studies of WHOIS

  • To: Council GNSO <council@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Subject: [council] Report on public suggestions of further studies of WHOIS
  • From: Liz Gasster <liz.gasster@xxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 25 Feb 2008 17:26:55 -0800
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  • Thread-topic: Report on public suggestions of further studies of WHOIS

All,

You may recall that when the GNSO Council decided last October in LA to 
terminate the pending PDP on WHOIS, you also decided to solicit public opinions 
about the types of future studies that might be conducted on WHOIS, to inform 
future policy development.  You may also recall that the 31 October resolution 
asks staff to prepare a summary of the submissions received (amended to request 
by February 25), and the Council would then provide additional definition 
regarding potential data gathering and study requirements.  Staff would then 
provide the Council with rough cost estimates for various components of data 
gathering and studies as requested by the Council.  Based on those cost 
estimates, the Council will decide what data gathering and studies would be 
pursued; and 4) staff will perform the resulting data gathering and studies and 
report the results back to the Council.
The public comment period closed on 15 February, and attached is a summary and 
analysis of the public comments we received (25 total) that I've compiled with 
the considerable help of an expert consultant, Lorrie Faith Cranor.  Dr. Cranor 
is a professor of computer science at Carnegie Mellon U. and an expert 
researcher on Internet privacy, security and related issues, and we are 
fortunate to have her expertise to review and collate study suggestions.

As you consider next steps, I do want to point out that in the attached 
summary, we have grouped proposed studies according to the following topic 
areas:


1.       WHOIS misuse

2.       Compliance with data protection laws and registrar accreditation 
agreements

3.       Availability of privacy services

4.       Demand and motivation for use of privacy services

5.       Impact of WHOIS data protection on crime and abuse

6.       Proxy registrar compliance with law enforcement and dispute resolution 
requests

7.       WHOIS data accuracy

You may find it useful to first consider which of the groupings address 
questions you think that having data about would inform the debate. Once you 
have identified which questions you want to answer, then you could focus on 
only those particular groupings and consider which study approach (or 
combination of approaches) will best answer your questions. In some cases 
Lorrie has indicated that the different studies answer slightly different 
questions. In some cases she indicates that some of the approaches are likely 
to give better data, or that some of the approaches are likely to be less 
expensive.  When you think about the fundamental questions asked by each 
grouping, you may find it more useful to consider the questions asked by each 
grouping as follows:

1.       How big is the WHOIS misuse problem that may need to be solved?
2.       Is there a non-compliance with data protection laws problem that needs 
to be solved?
3.       Are there already market-driven solutions available?
4.       Is there demand for market-driven solutions, and are they being used 
for legitimate or illegitimate purposes?
5.       Do WHOIS data protections lead to abuse and misuse?
6.       Are provisions for providing protected WHOIS data to law enforcement 
for investigation of crime and abuse effective?
7.       Is WHOIS data accurate?

I note also that several of the proposed studies are being recommended to 
address questions of WHOIS accuracy and compliance and I have also shared this 
summary with ICANN's compliance director and deputy general counsel. They may 
have further views that we will share as appropriate.  Lastly, if you would 
find it useful, Dr. Cranor can be available to participate in an upcoming call 
to discuss the report and answer questions.

Thanks, Liz

Attachment: WHOIS-study-suggestion-report-25 Feb 2008.pdf
Description: WHOIS-study-suggestion-report-25 Feb 2008.pdf



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