[ALAC] Draft ALAC Statement of PIC DRP

Alan Greenberg alan.greenberg at mcgill.ca
Sat Mar 30 23:20:57 UTC 2013


Holly had volunteered to look at the Public Interest Commitment (PIC) 
Dispute Resolution Procedure (DRP) and see if an ALAC statement was required.

Due to time constraints, she could not do this, and Olivier asked my 
to follow up on it.

I did so, and found that the DRP was, in my mind, not satisfactory. 
The DRP can be found at 
http://newgtlds.icann.org/en/applicants/agb/draft-picdrp-15mar13-en.pdf.

The statement can be found at https://community.icann.org/x/pJlwAg 
and is also reproduced below. It is short, but somewhat harsher than 
those I would normally draft.

Alan

========================
ALAC Statement on Public Interest Commitments Dispute Resolution Procedure

The ALAC is disappointed in the proposed mechanism for enforcement of 
the new gTLD Public Interest Commitments.

Although described a dispute resolution procedure, the process was 
introduce whereby a Public Interest Commitment (PIC) could be 
"enforced by ICANN" 
(http://www.icann.org/en/news/public-comment/base-agreement-05feb13-en.htm).

When announced, many in the community presumed that "enforced" 
included an ICANN Compliance connection, and that "by ICANN" in fact 
meant, "by ICANN".

As it stands, the process:

- Requires possibly significant fees, the magnitude of which are currently;

- Requires that the complainant can show measurable harm due to the violation;

- May be filed by ICANN, but there is no obligation to do so.

Since no exception is noted, presumably ICANN could only file an 
objection if ICANN itself could demonstrate that it was measurable 
harmed. This sounds like a return to the days when the only sanctions 
ICANN applied under the RAA were those where ICANN was not being paid.

Using this same standard of language, one could say that "trade-marks 
are enforced by ICANN" because it has provided the UDRP.

There was much hope in the community that the PIC would go at least 
part way to recovering from the mistake of not requiring all new gTLD 
applicants to stand by their application promises once the new TLD is 
delegated. This hope has not been satisfied.




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