t byfield on Thu, 20 Apr 2000 06:20:26 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> Proposed Resolution for NCDNHC on ICANN policy WRT new TLDS and FNs |
"Non Commercial Domain Name Holders Constituency (NCDNHC) Proposal on Famous Names and Civil Society TLDs" version 2.0c author: Hans Klein, hans.klein@pubpolicy.gatech.edu April 18, 2000 [Original was: "Proposed Resolution for NCDNHC on ICANN policy with respect to new Top Level Domains and famous names" version 1.0a author: James Love, love@cptech.org March 27, 2000] * * * Begin Proposal * * * Non Commercial Domain Name Holders Constituency (NCDNHC) Proposal on Famous Names and Civil Society TLDs I. Substantive Proposals (2) ============================ The NCDNHC proposes: 1. ICANN should not introduce restrictions on the registration of new top level domains (TLDs) based on their connection with famous names, 2. ICANN should accept petitions by new registries for civil society TLDs. These two proposals derive from the following principles. II. ICANN Lacks Authority to Regulate Property Rights ===================================================== Proposal 1 (above) derives not from any ideas about what constitutes intellectual property, but rather from the principle that decisions over intellectual property are public policy decisions inappropriate for ICANN. ICANN is an institution for technical coordination of the Internet, not property rights policy-making. With its Universal Dispute Resolution Procedures (UDRP) ICANN has touched on substantive policy matters, with the risk of inappropriately expanding its mission. Additional regulation of property rights, such as famous name restrictions on domain names, risks dragging ICANN into public policy-making in an area where it has neither competence nor a mandate. Property concerns should be addressed outside of ICANN. Institutions with relevant authority already exist for such matters: national governments regulate property rights. ICANN has already created the UDRP to resolve trademark disputes, and it should not expand its role in restricting the use of trademarks in domain names. The NCDNHC applauds the DNSO Working Group B Report (17 April 2000) which reports the consensus view that: "There does not appear to be the need for the creation of a universally famous marks list at this point in time." NCHDHC also supports the use of a company or product name in connection with a TLD that is designed to facilitate organization of consumers or workers or for criticism. We call on the appropriate institutions -- legal authorities with national jurisdiction over trademark disputes -- to permit this use of names. In summary, it is the position of the NCDNHC that "1. ICANN should not introduce restrictions on the registration of new top level domains (TLDs) based on their connection with famous names." Principle 2: Civil Society Merits Designated Name Spaces =========================================== ICANN should accept proposals for new domains specifically oriented toward civil society. A "civil society TLD" model could include a chartered gTLD that specifically hosts communications for certain kinds of non-commercial, civil society institutions. Its charter may specify criteria for use of its domain name that relate to the character of the corresponding civil society group The ".edu" domain provides one model for this. In the case of ".edu" that civil society association is accredited, degree-granting educational institutions. Civil society TLDs would complement existing domains that are increasingly oriented towards government and business. Country code TLDs are increasingly associated with national governments, as evidenced by proposals to explicitly place ccTLD administrators under the public policy authority of national governments (see relevant GAC proposals.) Existing gTLDs are predominantly utilized by commercial entities (most notably ".com" but increasingly ".org" and ".net.") Civil society TLDs would serve the "third sector" of private, non-commercial institutions. Different civil society TLDs could be created for such civil society groups including (but not limited to): religious groups labor groups libraries consumer groups environmental groups free speech groups professional associations philanthropic institutions The specific character strings of the csTLDs are not addressed here. Specific strings can be defined by the registries proposing a new csTLD, in consultation with the relevant civil society groups. Civil society groups would be free to continue using domains in other TLDs, as they do now. * * * End of Proposal * * * # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net