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[council] ICANN WHOIS MISUSE STUDY FINDINGS WEBINAR INVITATION

  • To: "council@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx" <council@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Subject: [council] ICANN WHOIS MISUSE STUDY FINDINGS WEBINAR INVITATION
  • From: Nathalie Peregrine <nathalie.peregrine@xxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 3 Dec 2013 22:10:52 -0800
  • Accept-language: en-US
  • Acceptlanguage: en-US
  • Cc: "gnso-secs@xxxxxxxxx" <gnso-secs@xxxxxxxxx>
  • List-id: council@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Sender: owner-council@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Thread-index: Ac7wtT3J8VzsB0ImSiCdcq1shq+PMA==
  • Thread-topic: ICANN WHOIS MISUSE STUDY FINDINGS WEBINAR INVITATION

ICANN WHOIS MISUSE STUDY FINDINGS WEBINAR INVITATION


In order to participate, please RSVP via email to the GNSO Secretariat 
(gnso.secretariat@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:gnso.secretariat@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>) to 
receive the call details.


You are invited to participate in a webinar about the recently released Whois 
Misuse Study, conducted for ICANN by Carnegie Mellon University’s Cylab. This 
study has now been published for public comment, and community feedback is 
being invited in order to assist ICANN with evaluating potential changes to 
Whois policy.
The study was commissioned by the GNSO to obtain objective and quantifiable 
information about the extent, nature, and impact of WHOIS public data misuse – 
that is, harmful actions taken using contact information obtained from WHOIS – 
through (1) analyzing reported misuse incidents and (2) conducting experiments 
to measure misuse and the effectiveness of anti-harvesting measures. CMU was 
engaged to perform the study using two complementary approaches: (1) a 
descriptive study to document and analyze WHOIS misuse incidents that have 
already occurred and (2) an experimental study to stimulate and record misuse 
to in order to measure more reliably the impact of making WHOIS data public and 
WHOIS query filters applied to deter data harvesting.
CMU’s chief researchers on the study, Dr. Nicolas Christin and Mr. Nektarios 
Leontiadis, and ICANN staff will provide a briefing on Tuesday 17 December at 
12.00 UTC and
19.00 UTC, summarizing their findings and conclusions based on the studies they 
performed and data they analyzed. Amongst other topics, Dr. Clayton will 
discuss:

·         CMU’s methodology for the study and the hypothesis tested;
·         The different project activities that were undertaken for the study;
·         CMU’s analysis of the data reported and sampled for the study; and
·         CMU’s conclusions based on the results of its analysis.
The two sessions are duplicates, scheduled to accommodate different time zones. 
Each session, scheduled to run for sixty (60) minutes, will be conducted in 
English only. The meeting will be run in Adobe Connect with a slide 
presentation along with a dial-in conference bridge for audio.

Participants will have the opportunity to ask questions at the end of each 
session. During the course of the webinar, questions may also be submitted 
using the chat function of Adobe Connect. If you are not able to participate in 
either of the live sessions, the recording of the session will be made 
available shortly after the meeting. The policy staff is always available to 
answer any questions that you email to 
policy-staff@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:policy-staff@xxxxxxxxx>.

In order to participate, please RSVP via email to the GNSO Secretariat 
(gnso.secretariat@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:gnso.secretariat@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>) to 
receive the call details. Please indicate which call you would like to join on 
Tuesday 17 December - at 12.00 UTC or at 19.00 UTC (to convert those times into 
your local time, see: http://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/fixedform.html). We 
will send you an e-mail reminder before the event with log-in and dial-in 
details. Please DO NOT RSVP to any other ICANN staff member’s e-mail address.



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