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Re: [ga] Why ICANN should publish Miriam Sapiro's report
- To: Jeff Williams <jwkckid1@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: Re: [ga] Why ICANN should publish Miriam Sapiro's report
- From: Hugh Dierker <hdierker2204@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 31 Aug 2004 14:36:43 -0700 (PDT)
- Cc: ga@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- In-reply-to: <4133F64A.A8BAEEC@ix.netcom.com>
- Sender: owner-ga@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Please be smart and read your own comment. You want ICANN to "publish" material that alleges someone else committed "criminal misconduct or fraud". Can you spell defamation?
Eric
Jeff Williams <jwkckid1@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Richard and all former DNSO GA members or other interested
stakeholders/users,
It should be clear by now that ICANN made a huge error in judgment in
awarding via a lottery method, .BIZ and .INFO in particular to whom
they had awarded those two gTLD's to. It is likely that questionable
activities were involved in that ill begotten process. As such, it
should come
as no real surprise that the report Ms Shipper sent to ICANN has not
been published.
Richard Henderson wrote:
> In mid-July Miriam Sapiro and Summit Strategies International
> submitted a report "Evaluation of the New gTLDs: Policy and Legal
> Issues". This report was part of the New gTLD evaluation process,
> overseen by Sebastien Bachollet. The report has been long-awaited, and
> raises concerns which may be relevant to policy development for future
> gTLDs.
> But where is it?
>
> Have the ICANN staff and Board published this report anywhere on the
> ICANN website? Is it in the public domain? For the sake of openness
> and transparency (and to benefit informed participation by all
> constituencies) is it going to be published?
>
> According to the presentation given in Kuala Lumpur on 22nd July 2004,
> the report had already been submitted to ICANN and included (among
> others) these findings:
>
> The Start-Up periods of registries like .info and .biz were reported
> as "raising concerns". "The Sunrise period, without screening or
> verification, led to serious abuses." It added that "the landrush
> allocation methods enabled gaming of the system".
>
> "Interviews raised questions about enforcement" in implementing
> registration restrictions in .biz. And data sampling brought to light
> "questionable registrations" in relation to the restrictions that were
> supposed to be in place.
>
> "The Registries indicated there had been no major lawsuits" or legal
> or regulatory problems "that had not been considered at the outset".
> (I find this statement quite surprising in the context of .biz)
>
> ICANN: Please could we have access to Miriam Sapiro's report?
>
> Robert Connelly, the Afilias Director who resigned over the failure of
> the start-up processes, described the .info Sunrise as "an
> abomination".
>
> Registrars were caught out gaming the system and exploiting their
> registrar privilege to make mass registrations for themselves.
>
> Registrars in the .info cartel failed to adhere to their own
> Registry-Registrar Agreements.
>
> Many consumers were hugely inconvenienced and unfairly treated by the
> failure of ICANN's processes, and the abuse of those processes by
> Registry directors or their registrar companies.
>
> Requests for responses to fair and legitimate concerns were met with
> stony silence from Dan Halloran at ICANN. 840 days later (yes, over
> two years) and despite extending my request for a response to Paul
> Twomey, my questions (also kindly published at ICANNWatch) have been
> totally ignored.
>
> If not for the sake of those effected by ICANN's failed policies last
> time, then at least so we may learn from those failures for future
> gTLD launches, these serious concerns should be answered and debated.
>
> At the very least, I hope ICANN will make public the entire report
> presented to them by Miriam Sapiro. It's been 44 days since she gave
> it to them.
>
> How many seconds does it take to ftp text to the ICANN website?
>
> Richard Henderson
>
>
Regards,
--
Jeffrey A. Williams
Spokesman for INEGroup LLA. - (Over 134k members/stakeholders strong!)
"Be precise in the use of words and expect precision from others" -
Pierre Abelard
"If the probability be called P; the injury, L; and the burden, B;
liability depends upon whether B is less than L multiplied by
P: i.e., whether B is less than PL."
United States v. Carroll Towing (159 F.2d 169 [2d Cir. 1947]
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