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[council] Update on Trademark clearinghouse from ICANN CEO
- To: "council@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <council@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: [council] Update on Trademark clearinghouse from ICANN CEO
- From: Bruce Tonkin <Bruce.Tonkin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 14 Dec 2012 06:07:24 +0000
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- Thread-topic: Update on Trademark clearinghouse from ICANN CEO
>From the ICANN blog at: http://blog.icann.org
Concluding the Series of Trademark Clearinghouse Meetings
by Fadi Chehadé on December 13, 2012
Today I convened the final informational call to close off the series of
stakeholder meetings on implementing the Trademark Clearinghouse. I shared the
following updates:
1. Trademark Clearinghouse Agreements
a. I am pleased to announce that we have signed an agreement with Deloitte
Enterprise Risk Services to be the first provider of validation services for
the Trademark Clearinghouse. As promised, we will be posting that agreement
shortly. The terms are in line with what I shared in my last blog entry:
■ ICANN retains all intellectual property rights in the Trademark Clearinghouse
data. (Note this is as between ICANN and Deloitte. ICANN claims no intellectual
property rights with respect to user data.)
■ Deloitte’s validation services are to be non-exclusive. ICANN may add
additional validators after a threshold of minimum stability is met.
■ Trademark submission fees are capped at USD 150 per record per year.
Discounts are available for bulk & multi-year submissions.
■ IBM will charge Deloitte for database access via an application processing
interface (API).
■ ICANN may audit Deloitte’s performance (and revenues/costs) to confirm that
the costs and fees for validation services are reasonable.
b. I am also pleased to announce that we are making continued progress on
negotiations with IBM for the provision of database services. This contract is
structured around a master agreement, with separate statements of work to
provide for the relevant services. We are now working on the first Statement
of Work for the database, and expect to conclude this in the next weeks. We
expect to negotiate and conclude the second Statement of Work, covering the
Sunrise and Trademark Claims services, in January. Here are some highlights
based on the current discussions:
■ IBM will maintain the Trademark Clearinghouse Database.
■ Data will be imported to the Database within three hours of receipt from a
Validator.
■ IBM will be available 24 x 7 for high severity incidents impacting the
operability of the database.
■ ICANN will receive all intellectual property rights necessary for transition
to a new database provider.
■ IBM will charge registries and registrars for real-time access to the
database during the sunrise and claims periods. The fee structure remains
under consideration.
2. The “Strawman Solution”
As noted in the last blog posting, the “strawman solution” developed during the
stakeholder meetings has been posted for public comment, and also sent to the
GNSO Council for their input. I understand that this request is on the
Council’s agenda for its 20 December 2012 meeting.
I noted that the public comment notice has been updated to include the full
range of what, together with staff, I determined to be implementation vs.
policy. (This included some modifications from the original posting which I
entered last week.)
We will be awaiting the GNSO’s response, as well as considering and analyzing
the comments received on the strawman, to help us determine the appropriate
next steps.
3. Additional Updates
I shared a few additional updates on today’s call. On the Uniform Rapid
Suspension (URS) implementation, the good news is that we have received
multiple submissions in response to the RFI that are within the target price
range, and we will shortly be publishing an announcement on this.
As promised in Toronto, now that the Trademark Clearinghouse and URS are well
on the way to successful implementation, I will focus next on the RAA
negotiations. Regrettably, we could not gather enough people to hold the first
discussion in December as intended, but we are scheduling this for early in
January.
Currently, I do not have plans to hold additional conference calls on this
matter, as we are now on a good path and the implementation team will continue
to work through the remaining milestones for getting the Trademark
Clearinghouse up and running.
I attempted with great care to maintain a delicate balance throughout this
effort. I felt sandwiched between my deep respect (and growing understanding)
of the GNSO processes, and the need to resolve some pressing matters that were
standing in the way of a successful implementation ― an implementation that we
would all stand and defend with pride in the public eye.
While no collaborative process is perfect, I have done my best to ensure that
all voices have been heard and that we are working collectively to arrive at a
balanced outcome for the public benefit. I learned a lot from the process
that will serve me well in the months and years ahead.
I would like to put on record my thanks to all those who engaged in these
issues with me in that spirit, and the tremendous effort and good will that
were demonstrated. Now, let’s move forward together. We have much to do as a
community!
Sincerely,
Fadi
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