Second National Summit on International Internet Governance Changes ISOCNZ ICANN Evolution and Reform Analysis and Comments June 2002 Bucharest, Romania.

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Transcript Second National Summit on International Internet Governance Changes ISOCNZ ICANN Evolution and Reform Analysis and Comments June 2002 Bucharest, Romania.

Second National Summit on
International Internet Governance Changes
ISOCNZ
ICANN Evolution and Reform
Analysis and Comments
June 2002
Bucharest, Romania
ICANN
ICANN
The Internet Compartion for Assigned Names and Numbers
IRP
President & CEO: Mike Roberts
NovemberCHAIR:
1998 - 9 VINT
MemberCERF
Virgin Birth Board
3 DNSO
Domain Name
Support Org.
3 PSO
Protocol
Support Org
Trade Marks
Business
Non-Commercial
Registries
Registrars
Country Code Managers
General Assembly
ITU
IETF
ETSI
WWWC
VB’s
44ccSO
5 @ Large
GAC
Address
Support Org
Address
Council
Names Council (21)
ISPS
3 ASO
RIPE
ARIN
APNIC
At Large
Membership
Becky Burr
176,837
Bob Shaw
Christopher
Wilkinson
WIPO
Others
ICANN
ICANN
The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers
CHAIR:
PresidentVINT
& CEO:CERF
Stuart Lynn
Board seats
2 GNSO
Generic
Support Org
Names Council
(16)
ISPS
Registries
Registrars
Non-Commercial
2 ASO
2 CCSO
Address
Country code
Support Org Support Org
Address
International
Council
Council
(number
RIPE
unspecified)
ARIN
APNIC
LACNIC
tbd
Voting
members
commit to
ICANN policy
development
8 “At Large”
5 Liaison
* Nom Com
Selected by
the
Nominating
Committee*
Standing
committees
g Registries
TAC
c Registries
g Registrars
RIR’s
IAB/IETF
RSSAC
ISP’s
Large bus. users
Small bus. users
SAC
IP orgs
Academic/Public
GAC
Trade Marks
Consumer
groups
Business
Individual
Nameholders
IAB/IETF
Others ?
TAC
GAC
General Assembly
4 unspecified
Internation
ERC PROPOSAL
The “Names Council”
Chair
Selected by the Council
Providers
Users
ISP
Business
ISP
Business
Registries
Non Commercial
Registries
Non Commercial
Registrars
IP
Registrars
IP
Elected by
Nom Com
(voting)
Elected by
Nom Com
(voting)
Elected by
Nom Com
(voting)
GAC Appointer
(non-voting)
Internation
ERC PROPOSAL
The Country Names Council
Unspecified number
of regionally voting
Councillors
Unspecified number
of regionally voting
Councillors
1/3 of Council by :
- appointments by Nominating Committee (voting),
- 1 GAC appointee (non-voting)
Internation
Overview: ICANN: A Blueprint for Reform
“A Blueprint for Reform”, posted 20 June 2002, summarizes the
recommendations of the Evolution and Reform Committee (ERC)
to the ICANN Board of Directors
Process accelerated in February, 2002 with paper “ICANN: A Case
for Reform”, followed by the renaming of the Board committee to
the Committee on Evolution and Reform, and several papers:
Staff Paper on What ICANN Does
Working Paper on ICANN Mission and Core Values
Working Paper on the ICANN Structure and the Nominating
Committee Concept
Internation
Overview, cont’d
• A Blueprint for Reform:
• Result of extensive consultation and outreach since
February, 2002
• “A Case for Reform” was controversial in some
aspects; less so in others.
• Broad community agreement that changes were
needed; no agreement on many of the solutions
proposed in the Case for Reform.
Internation
Goal of Blueprint is to ensure an ICANN that is:
• Effective and responsive
• Streamlined processes that support participation but
lessen burdens of unnecessary procedures
• Has more credibility
• Maintains consensus where possible, but has timely
conclusions, able to make decisions
• Supports individual and other forms of participation
• Has adequate funding
• Maintains open and transparent processes
Internation
Mission and Core Values
• Discussions about “Thick” versus “Thin” didn’t
bring any answers
• Input from community confirms that ICANN
does have some policy making responsibilities
• ICANN’s role is to perform the technical
coordination and to obtain the policy guidance
for it.
• ICANN’s role in policy should be limited to
those areas reasonably related to ICANN’s
technical mission
Internation
Mission and Core Values
• Differences in view will continue regarding
when ICANN is outside its mission parameters
• ERC didn’t define “boundaries” but called for
follow on work.
• Propose to reject view that ICANN should not
be involved in policy at all.
• Notes importance of addressing questions with
input of those affected, and the public interest.
Internation
ICANN’s Mission is to coordinate stable operation of
the Internet’s unique identifier systems.
ICANN coordinates:
-allocation and assignment of three sets of unique
identifiers for the Internet (Domain Names, Internet
Protocol addresses and autonomous system (AS)
numbers, Protocol port and parameter numbers)
-operation and evolution of the DNS’s root name
server systems
-policy-development as necessary to perform
these functions.
Internation
ICANN’s Structure, as presented, has some
significant changes:
• Composition of Board changes
• Board doesn’t have power to ratify selections of Nominating
Committee
• Policy Organizations select/elect their own chairs and board
members
• Composition of Nominating Committee includes particular interest
groups and public interest.
• GNSO structure more detailed
• Establishes Country Code SO (CNSO)
• Disestablishes PSO; Establishes TAC
• Governmental involvement strengthened in terms of how broadly
the GAC is involved and gives new power to GAC.
• Remains a public benefit corporation chartered in California, with
an elected Board of Directors
Internation
ICANN’s Board Structure--15 member board
(presently 19), 5 non voting Liaisons
Voting Members (15)
•
•
•
Nominating Committee appoints 8
Policy Supporting Organizations each select 2 (for a total of 6)
President of ICANN
Non voting Liaisons (5)
•
•
•
•
•
Technical Advisory Committee (TAC)
IAB/IETF
Root Server System Advisory Committee (RSSAC)
Security Advisory Committtee (SAC)
Government Advisory Council (GAC)
Internation
Supporting Organizations
•
•
•
•
GNSO: Generic Names Supporting Organization
CNSO: Country Names Supporting Organization
ASO: Addressing Supporting Organization
No Protocol Supporting Organization in new model
Four Standing Advisory Committees
•
•
•
•
GAC
TAC
RSSAC
SAC
•
All would be appropriately staffed
Internation
GNSO:
Purpose: engaging in activities relevant to gTLDs
• Developing policy recommendations to the ICANN board
• Nurturing consensus across the GNSO’s constituencies
• Initially: 6 voting constituencies
• Open to adding others as provisionals, but have to meet certain
criteria
Providers
-gTLD registries
-gTLD registrars
-ISP const.
Users
-business const.
-int. property const.
-non commercial const.
Internation
GNSO Council: aka Generic Names Council
Initially, 6 voting members elected, 2 each,
• by the provider voting constituencies
• and user voting constituencies
PLUS
• Three voting members elected by NomCom
• AND
• One non voting liaison appointed by the GAC
Internation
Further Organizational Details: GNSO
• Chair selected by voting members of GNSO
• Size may change if provisional constituencies become
voting constituencies, goal is to maintain overall
balance among three main groups; as well as equality
of representation between provider and users. Votes
may be reallocated accordingly with these changes.
• Renewable two year, staggered terms
Internation
Further Organizational Details:
GNSO’s General Assembly is Significantly Modified
•
•
•
•
Member of GNSO Council, appointed by the Council, as chair
Cross constituency meeting place of voting and non voting
constituencies
Exists for purpose of exchange of information and ideas
Resource for creation, under GNSO Council direction, working
groups, drafting groups, Task Forces
• Not forum for decision making or taking formal
positions; no votes
•
•
•
Use of moderated discussion lists and forums. Unmoderated lists
can exist in other fora.
GNSO Council has responsibility for GA
Review by Board via independent entity of GNSO and Council in 12
months with changes possible at that time if needed
Internation
CNSO:
PURPOSE: ENGAGING IN ACTIVITIES RELEVANT TO
COUNTRY CODE TOP LEVEL DOMAINS
• Develops policy recommendations to the ICANN Board
• Nurtures consensus across the CNSO’s constituencies
[members], including the name-related activities of the ccTLDs
ERC:
• Acknowledged diversity of ccTLDs, concerned with which
responsibilities fall under purview of national or local jurisdiction
and those that lead to the need for global harmonization.
• Concluded CNSO is forum where distinctions will be further
developed and from which global aspects will emerge.
• Concluded there is an interplay between ccTLD domain names
and other identifiers whose global policy coordination ICANN is
charged with and that interaction within the ICANN sphere is
required.
Internation
CNSO: Composition and Selection
•
Intended to be a policy development body
•
Voting membership: include representatives of ccTLDs registries
committed to global policy development through ICANN’s
processes, as evidenced by signed agreements or by other means,
such as funding support
•
CNSO Council composed of a) regionally elected members selected
by and from among voting ccTLDs and b) several additional voting
members chosen by the NomCom, with emphasis on individuals
with experience in global names policy and c) a non voting GAC
liaison. Regionally elected members should comprise about 2/3’s of
Voting members.
•
Shouldn’t be separately incorporated, or a trade association for cc
Administrators. Those functions should occur outside ICANN.
Internation
Status on Addressing ccTLD Agreements
• ERC hasn’t addressed these issues
• Progress is being made
• ERC recommends that the Board encourages
the GAC and delegates from the global ccTLD
community to explore possible resolutions
Internation
ASO: Address Supporting Organization
• Viewed as working well
• Few changes except addition of non voting
GAC liaison
Internation
Advisory Committees
• GAC: Committee with bylaws determining its
membership. Advisory to Board.
• Has non voting liaision seat on Board, policy
organizations, and other advisory Committees.
• Should receive notice and opportunity to
comment on all ICANN policies before
taken.
• Invites the GAC to explore ways for multi-way
communications
Internation
RSSAC: Root Server System Advisory Committee
•
•
•
•
Stays largely the same
Adds GAC liaison
Appoints a non voting liaison to Board
Review of RSSAC by ICANN to be conducted on
recommendations on effectiveness, including security
planning and current relationship to ICANN
• Some have expressed concern about further
formalization of some operational aspects; however
the present root server operators have widespread
community support.
Internation
SAC: Security Advisory Committee
• Stays largely the same
• Adds GAC liaison
• Appoints non voting liaison to Board
Internation
TAC: Technical Advisory Committee
• Available to provide technical advise and guidance to
Board and other organizations
• Resource and active watchdog for technical issues
• Meeting point for various parts of technical community
• In part, replacement for PSO, but has different
purpose.
• At minimum,membership could include: IETF, ITU,
ETSI, and W3C, plus three members with strong
technical background appointed by the NomCom.
Internation
Nominating Committee (NomCom)
Purpose: select Directors and other individuals
• Intended to balance representative selection of other
directors and positions to ensure that ICANN can
benefit from individuals of highest integrity who place
public interest above special interest, and who are
knowledgeable about the environment ICANN
operates in.
• Chair appointed by Board and two non voting liaisons,
RSSAC and SAC.
• The NomCom is an attempt to balance providers,
users, technical and public interests.
Internation
Composition of the 19 delegates appointed to the
NomCom
One delegate from each of the following:
gTLD registries
gTLD registrars
Consumer/Civil Society
Ind. Domain Name holders
IAB/IETF
Large Business Users
Small Business Users
Academic and other public users
ccTLD registries
Address Registries
IP Organizations
Internet Service Providers
TAC
GAC
PLUS
Unaffiliated public interest persons (4)
Internation
Selection of the NomCom
• Constituencies select their own reps
• Where no constituency is in place, Board will appoint
delegates following consultation with bodies who
“speak” for the affected groups
• Will be further defined in Transition Process
• Objective would be to qualify other constituencies to
appoint noncom delegates
• At Large could play part as matures
• Terms would be non renewable two year terms
• Limitations on serving as board member for a year
following serving on NomCom
Internation
Policy and Process
• ICANN Board is ultimate decision making body.
• May be instances when Board has to act if consensus
not reached
• Everything that ICANN does in not policy. Certain
characteristics should determine what is policy
• Policy development through bottom up consensus
process should be encouraged.
• IF Board doesn’t accept a policy recommendation of a
policy body, it must return to the SO with clear
statement of concerns to be addressed
• If resubmitted to Board, a 2/3’s majority would be
required to reject or modify.
Internation
Policy and Process, cont’d
• Process: New policy development or revisions can be generated
by Policy body, or by Board.
• Clear criteria are presented for any policy development process.
• Emergency situations might require temporary measures.
• Elements of policy development must include timelines, process
for public input and other advice, and process for consensus
wherever possible.
• Staff support will be provided to SOs
• Task Force of representatives from ICANN community will
recommend specific set of policy development procedures and
timetables, to complete work by August 31,2002
Internation
Accountability
•
Ombudsman Office is established, reports to the Board. Has its
own budget, authorized by Board. Charter adopted by Board after
public comment.
•
Public Participation: Staff position to manage public participation
and facilitate receipt and analysis of all public comments.
•
Reconsideration: amended to apply to actions by staff which are
alleged to contradict board policy or inconsistent with known facts,
or 2)actions by Board alleged to be based on error. Sets timeline for
reconsideration.
•
Amendments to by-laws require 2/3s vote, as now
•
Creation of non binding arbitration will be required for allegations
that Board acted in conflict with bylaws.
Internation
Government Participation
•
•
•
•
GAC to appoint liaison to
Board
Nominating Committee
Non voting liaisons to each of the SO councils and the
Advisory Committees
• Appoint contact individual to coordinate between IANA and
particular government officials in delegations or redelegations are
pending
• GAC should be requested to participate in dialogue with ICANN
and ccTLD community re consummation of agreements that
provide framework of accountability
Internation
Advisory Panels
Board can create expert advisory Panels
Advise is not binding, but adds to record
Internation
Funding
• Core of funding to come from those registries and registrars with
agreements – primarily today the gTLD registries and registrars
• Base funding should come from these sources
• Other sources include RIRs and ccTLDs where ICANN does not
yet have agreements
• Board should pursue a mechanism where those with agreements
forward a fee based on approx. 25 cents US. This fee is collected
by the registries and registrars on behalf of all beneficiaries of the
ICANN process.
• Expenditures are subject to public annual budget approval.
• Priority to build reserves. Amount can be reduced once reserves
are in place.
Internation
Internal ICANN Structure
• Technical/operational functions ICANN
manages should be organizationally and
functionally segregated to the extent possible
from policy functions.
• There is no plan to separate technical and
policy functions into separate organizations
Internation
Some Interesting Points
• Role of ccTLDs seems better recognized and importance of
positive dialogue seems clearer.
• Relationship of funding mechanism and how it applies to ccTLDs
unclear.
• Agreement to keep the users and providers together in policy
making in gTLDs is positive.
• Selection of own board members and chairs by policy entities is
improvement and key.
• Approach to structure of policy development SOs is still rather top
down through insertion of NomCom selected participants, and
new GAC liaison
Internation
Interesting Points, cont’d
• Structure of NomCom and its scope and the non-constituency
selected delegates is rather unclear
• Role of NomCom in how many/who they select seems very
significant. Scope of influence appears broad for untested new
organization.
• Although not voting, governments via the GAC seem to have
moved into a “watch” and liaison role in all functions. Represents
a significant shift and a huge change in work responsibility for the
GAC members
• Recognition of need to staff policy development important step.
Internation
What are the Other Key Areas which still need
addressing?
• Still lots of work to be done after Bucharest on
incomplete areas affecting ccTLDs
• Process of design of new gTLD SO may also have
implications for ccTLDs
• Transition from DNSO into new CNSO will require
planning and coordination with existing entities
• Do the GAC members want new role; have time and
finances to support expanded work functions implied?
• Does this change the private sector leadership in any
significant way?
• Other Questions?
APTLD on Reform
A comparison of the APTLD position
paper with the report of the Board
Committee on Evolution and Reform
Internation
Aptld paper
• Focused on Lynn
paper,which:
• Invites governments to
bring pressure on cctlds
• Was written alone
ERC.
• Departs substantially
from Lynn paper
• Encourages GAC and
cctlds to talk
• Has received substantial
ccTLD input
Internation
APTLD
• Failure to reach
contracts due to
misunderstanding by
ICANN of role of LIC,
Govts.,ccTLD
managers, and ICANN’s
relationship, leads to
imposition of “g-solution”
ERC
• “global aspect is of
extreme importance,
…….requires an intense
interaction within the
icann sphere”
Internation
APTLD
• ccTLD’s require entry in
the IANA database
• and root server service
• Supports White Paper
principles
ERC
• No comment
• No comment
• General support of
some, abandons direct
election of @Large
board seats
Internation
APTLD
• Does not favour
enhanced role for
governments
ERC
• Places GAC appointees on
Board, g-SO and ccSO and
their councils.
• Permits GAC comment
( or “approval”?) of every
policy developed
Internation
APTLD
ERC
• Approves of ccSO
• Approves of CNSO
• Disapproves of
Nominating committee
appointing SO Board
members
• SOs select own Board
members
Internation
APTLD
ERC
• Queried legal nature
• Confirms:
California corporation
• maintains independent
review
• maintains modified
independent review, and
adds Ombudsman
Further Comments
APTLD has resolved to seek
clarification from the ERC on a number
of matters.
Until those answers have been
considered, APTLD reserves its position
on those matters
Internation
APTLD questions of ERC
• The questions of the ERC are:
1.What is the “interplay” and what are the “other
identifiers”which requires the “intense
interaction with ICANN” of page 11, para 2?
2. What do the extra appointees to the
International Council = 1/3 of the ccSO, while
only 1/4 of the g?
Internation
APTLD questions of ERC
• What is the “imbalance” in the ccSO, which is
made up of cc managers, to make policy for
ccTLDs, which the NomCom appointees
rectify?
• If the NomCom is in response to the need for
“at large” representation, where was it ever
recommended that the At Large make
appointments throughout the ICANN
structure?
Internation
APTLD comments on ERC
• There are occasional lapses in language in the
Report where g-names are not clearly
distinguished from c-names:
• At pages 5, paras. 5&6 refer to “market
mechanisms to promote… a competitive
environment” and
• “competition in the registration of domain
names…”
• at page 19 a per domain name levy is calculated of
$0.25.
Internation
APTLD comments on ERC
• No reason is given as to why the ccSO could
not separately incorporate, nor function
additionally as a trade association.
• Its hard to sustain an argument that failure to
reach a cctld contract, a root server
agreement, or an RIR contract is due to
burdensome process.
Internation
APTLD Conclusion
• We are cautiously optimistic.
• This is a good position to negotiate from.
• Our (cctld) efforts in explaining our case
seems to be achieving results.
• We are committed to further work with our
cctld colleagues and ICANN entities to further
this important work