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RE: [ga] Call for Elimination of AGP

  • To: "Jeffrey A. Williams" <jwkckid1@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>, <ga@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Subject: RE: [ga] Call for Elimination of AGP
  • From: "Dominik Filipp" <dominik.filipp@xxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2008 13:49:23 +0200

Jeff,

I also understand Ross's concerns about the impact of the AGP
elimination associated with registrars. Those affecting the registration
test process. I have not noticed any other more serious Ross's concerns.
On the other hand, the concept of AGP is so extremely abusive, even in
smaller volume, that we should try looking for an alternative
workaround. In many production systems the test environment is
accomplished by alternative/duplicate systems or using different
approaches, all with no AGP help at all. So this is principally doable.
See also Chris's comments on the topic. As for me, I am keen on helping
identify the workaround, if desired.

To be honest, I am wondering a little about your hesitation between a
principal solution and ICANN's oversight, which effectiveness you have
been often criticizing ;-) Yes, the oversight will still be necessary
but I personally prefer principal solutions to oversight. For one simple
reason, to avoid possible tacit temptation to abuse it.

Dominik


-----Original Message-----
From: owner-ga@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:owner-ga@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf
Of Jeffrey A. Williams
Sent: Monday, March 31, 2008 12:55 PM
To: ga@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Cc: aheineman@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: [ga] Call for Elimination of AGP


Dominik and all,

  I also do not understand Roberto's recent comments regarding the
elimination of the AGP either.  And I doubt anyone else really does
except for perhaps attempting to be supportive of Ross's recent remarks
and comments on same.

  But we should all try to understand Ross's reasoning as he is
associated with a registrar.  As such, I am of the impression that he
believes that the AGP is a benifit for potential and existing
registrants.
To an extent he is correct in that belief.  Yet the AGP is being abused
by Tasters and speculators that damages the public namespace in many
already articulated ways.  Addressing those abuses and many of their
side effects such as Tasting, warehousing and kiting of Domain Names
needs to be eliminated.
What has been put into place isn't working, and won't possibly work to
address those, amongst other abuses of any TLD name space.

  From my point of view in part, either the AGP needs to be eliminated
due to the frequent abuses of it, or ICANN itself, meaning it's staff
needs to do much better oversite or all registries and registrars so
that those abuses are either eliminated, or addressed immediately so as
not to impact any TLD namespace.  It appears given other comments from
Roberto, that the ICANN staff is not willing or able to do that level of
oversite, which brings us all back to the elimination of the AGP.

  As I see it, ICANN has a huge positive opportunity to do good works
here.  Either they will address these abuse issues in a comprehensive
positive way or they will not.  


-----Original Message-----
>From: Dominik Filipp <dominik.filipp@xxxxxxxx>
>Sent: Mar 31, 2008 1:24 AM
>To: Roberto Gaetano <roberto@xxxxxxxxx>, chris@xxxxxx, Ross Rader 
><ross@xxxxxxxxxx>
>Cc: ga@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>Subject: RE: [ga] Call for Elimination of AGP
>
>
>Roberto,
>
>I am deeply disappointed by this your post. Do you really think there 
>has not been enough facts and evidence provided here worth listening to

>and being seriously considered? The GA is primarily a mailing list, not

>a survey, not a straw poll or any similar executive body with such 
>authority legitimately granted or delegated. Collecting and hunting for

>consensus, initiating and organizing surveys and straw polls is 
>therefore not the major task of mailing lists in the first place.
>Providing the GNSO with thoughts, ideas, facts and evidence is the task

>of the GA list in the first place.
>Sure, the GA is a standard mailing list and different people with 
>different opinions, attitudes and motivations can subscribe here. But 
>it is the duty of the GNSO to extract valuable ideas from the 
>contributions. Saying that the comments collected on the GA are not 
>worth considering for any other reason but the lack of evidence 
>provided just proves incapability to cope with real bottom-up process 
>with all its natural difficulties.
>
>I and some others here on the GA are struggling to collect facts and 
>evidence and to elaborate on the issue considering those facts. This 
>can be proven by number of posts sent on the list recently. Just read 
>the recent posts sent on the GA and other domain tasting related 
>mailing lists. And I am expecting similarly exact responses based on 
>facts and evidence and not on wishes, feelings, impressions, and hidden
intents.
>
>We DO have a survey result regarding the AGP concept. The result of the

>official survey conducted directly by the GNSO in the beginning of the 
>first comment period on Domain Tasting issue. The result that clearly 
>demonstrates a major public interest in eliminating the AGP. The result

>that has not been seriously considered and discussed in the GNSO yet!
>What would you then expect from us?
>
>To be perfectly honest, Roberto, I have absolutely no idea what you are

>talking about.
>
>Dominik
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: owner-ga@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:owner-ga@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On 
>Behalf Of Roberto Gaetano
>Sent: Monday, March 31, 2008 12:33 AM
>To: chris@xxxxxx; 'Ross Rader'
>Cc: ga@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>Subject: RE: [ga] Call for Elimination of AGP
>
>
>> 
>> Ross the GA doesn't get taken seriously because bottom up consensus 
>> means nothing to ICANN or the registries who tell ICANN what to do. 
>> It
>
>> doesn't get taken seriously unless we all agree with what the 
>> registries and ICANN BoD members and staff are saying.
>
>I don't know why others do not take seriously the GA, there might be 
>plenty of reasons.
>Mine is simply that I cannot take seriously a group where if four 
>people shout louder, affirming there's consensus on something (like for

>instance the elimination altogether of the AGP to fix a problem that is

>a different one) this has to be taken as gospel, even if other people 
>on the same list have argued different things.
>To me, you have consensus when there's a debate where people try to 
>converge instead of talking past eachother, when there's a chairperson 
>that coordinates the debate, and maybe call for straw polls to get the 
>sense of the room (in the figured sense), when there's an interaction 
>instead of a repetition of the same mantra by a tiny part of the 
>assembly.
>Failing this attempt to get some sort of agreement, there is nothing 
>worthed being listened to.
>
>> 
>> The fact that it is not taken seriously is solid proof of ICANN 
>> failing to meet it's mission altogether.
>
>And, pray tell, on a scale from 1 to 10, how would you rate the 
>performance of the GA?
>
>Cheers,
>Roberto
>
'Regards,
Jeffrey A. Williams
Spokesman for INEGroup LLA. - (Over 277k members/stakeholders strong!)
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   Abraham Lincoln

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