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Subject:
From:
Avri Doria <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Avri Doria <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 15 Aug 2014 10:01:27 -0400
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Hi,


I have a few bullets that pull me to mostly different conclusions.

- deferring to me in such matters is never the right thing to do.  In
social circumstances it is a lovely thing, but on a list, never.

- i tend to think of Staff as stakeholders too, though of a very
different sort.  When the multistakeholder definition says 'everyone',
forme, it has to mean them too.
Certainly their role as staff constrains their behaviors.  But sitting
at the table to discuss accountability, especially when one of the big
issues is staff whistleblowing and the safety with which they can do so,
it seems to me they should have a seat.

- this is broader than the inside ICANN community.  The accountability
is accountability to the global multuistakeholder community by ICANN on
issues of critical Internet resources.
I see these experts as being asked to give that viewpoint.
Now I fear so-called experts, they can be good or oh so
awful.  I think removing the choice of the experts  from the Board/Staff
political decision makers and giving it to the group of the 'wise' - the
Public Experts Group (PEG)*, is real and can be made meaningful.  I
think we should save our voice for our reaction to the choosing of the
Public Experts Group.  Any expert picked for the PEG or coordination
group should be ready for the approval or approbation of the larger
Internet governance community - both inside and outside of ICANN - a
place that can seem very cruel at times.

- the coordination group does not make decisions, it builds "solution
requirements for issues with input from the Cross Community Group"  This
is still ICANN where any solution they propose is subjected to full
public comment and Board approval. It is good to see they made this
explicit.  This is more like an advisory organization, seeming somewhat
a hybird between an advisory committee and a supporting organization -
time will tell.  It is a lot like the AOC in some aspects, except that
it is NOT the Board Chair, CEO and GAC chair deciding who is on the
entire team.  And it has a feeder mechanism for continuous community
input.  I think they did well on building a basic organizational
structure for this effort.

- the community group is the place to be.  I agree completely with


> 3. Please note: “All stakeholders that wish to participate in the
> Cross Community Group may indicate their involvement by submitting
> their names to [log in to unmask]” It would be
> great to get as many members as we can on the Group. The sign on
> process has begun.
> 

I have sent my signup request.

On the other recommendations, if you really think you can change things
for the better or if saying I told you so is important, by all means
write the strong letter.

I plan to focus on steps going forward. And of course I will comment on
any letter people come up with.

avri

* who incidentally had better pass an ICANN giggle test - being
announced will be a very painful experience for them if the community
thinks they are crap

On 15-Aug-14 09:00, Edward Morris wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> 
> While certainly willing to defer to those, like Avri, with more 
> experience as to what actually is possible within the ICANN universe,
> I do feel compelled to note that the revised accountability plan, to
> use a highly technical term, stinks. As in stinks big time. Despite
> slight modifications, it is still a process dominated by the same
> staff and Board that to date have repeatedly resisted all attempts at
> true accountability and transparency.
> 
> To wit:
> 
> 1. Despite community objection, we still have an ICANN staff member
> as a full participating member of the Coordination Group. The
> precedent this sets is untenable.  Once staff begins participating in
> the decision-making process they cease to be neutral facilitators of
> the process. Not only does this turn bottom up multi-stakeholderism
> on its head, it presents practical problems in terms of trust: if
> staff are involved in debating and making decisions, how can they be
> relied upon to neutrally manage the process?
> 
> 2. The role of experts is essentially unchanged, despite widespread 
> community opposition. They are not merely advisory; they are full 
> participants in the process.
> 
> ICANN notes, “Some stakeholders called for stakeholder selection of
> the advisors, and suggested that ICANN involvement in this process is
> not appropriate.  Others called for coordination between ICANN and 
> stakeholders in the selection of advisors”.  ICANN responds by doing 
> neither.
> 
> Instead it creates a Public Experts Group (PEG), selected by staff, 
> which will then select the expert members of the Coordination Group.
> How this is seen as being responsive to community concerns baffles
> me. Staff selects the experts who select the experts who participate
> as full members of the Coordination Group. There is no mechanism for
> ANY community involvement whatsoever in the selection of experts.
> We’re not entitled to even make a mere suggestion.
> 
> Staff justifies the inclusion of experts as participants, rather
> than advisors, by saying ICANN is responding to outside concern. The
> world is watching and external advice is needed to meet these
> concerns.
> 
> Yet the Thune/ Rubio letter Mr. Chehade often refers to when citing 
> outside pressure specifically calls for “additional oversight tools”
> to be given to the “multistakeholder community”. Perhaps if we say
> “pretty please” the experts selected by experts selected by staff in 
> collaboration with staff selected by staff and a Board member
> selected by the Board will give the “multistakeholder community”
> “additional oversight tools” to monitor the Board and staff. Perhaps
> the moon is made of blue cheese. Anything is possible, I suppose.
> Real oversight, as opposed to a facade of oversight, is presumably
> not in the immediate self interest of staff or Board.
> 
> An additional concern is the limitation in scope of the
> qualifications of the Public Experts Group. The PEG members are
> required to have “strong backgrounds in academia, governmental
> relations, global insight, and the AoC”. Two areas of concern:
> 
> 1. ICANN is a corporation. It is not a government, it is not (yet,
> at least) an international organization, it is a California public
> benefits corporation. We are trying to create accountability and
> transparency mechanisms for a private corporation, yet staff  omits
> corporate governance as a vital area in which expert advice is
> needed. By controlling the scope of competence of the experts, staff
> is dictating the scope of inquiry of the entire project. We need to
> be conscious of this and react accordingly as the process moves on.
> 
> 2. It appears that rather than set criteria and then find the
> experts for the PEG, ICANN has already selected the experts to be
> included in the group. Four background areas (is there any such thing
> as an expert on the AoC?), four expert slots. If this is the
> situation, and it may very well not be although I suspect it is, the
> process certainly does not comply with any sort of best practices for
> governance that I know of.
> 
> Suggested Action Plan
> 
> 1. While agreeing with Avri that we need to begin sorting how we are 
> going to work within the proposed structure, I also believe we need
> to issue a strong statement in opposition to the plan as currently 
> proposed. Staff modifications to the initial model are simply not 
> sufficient to bless this proposal with our approval.
> 
> Although such a statement might not create any change in the process 
> going forward, should the outcome be as bad as we may fear I’d like
> to be able to point to our ongoing opposition to the rigged structure
> when criticizing the outcome. Complete silence to the modified model
> at this point might be construed as approval. We could then, at a
> later stage, be accused of buying into the structure at the start and
> only criticizing the modified model later when we didn’t like the
> policy outputs. I’d like to avoid that.
> 
> 2. Although staff has not tasked our SG with recommending expert
> members of the Coordination Group I’d suggest we do so any way. The
> NCSG is the most diverse community within ICANN; our networks are
> vast. Let’s plug into them and be proactive. Once we have a list of a
> few names of folks we’d like to see involved on the Coordination
> Group we can use it as follows:
> 
> a.  We can send the list to the selected members of the PEG and ask
> that the individuals listed be given full consideration by the PEG
> for inclusion in the Coordination Group;
> 
> b. There is a provision in the modified plan by where “the Cross 
> Community Group may provide suggestions on external experts they
> feel would be helpful to the accountability effort”. By having
> already considered the situation we'll be prepared to offer names of
> experts when required.
> 
> In the hope of stimulating further recommendations, I’ll start by 
> suggesting that Dr. Deirdre Ahern of Trinity College Dublin would be
> an excellent selection for the Coordination Group. In addition to be
> an acknowledged expert in board governance, one of the many areas of 
> expertise identified by ICANN as being needed on the Coordination
> Group, Dr. Ahern also has a subspecialty in Internet Law and, in
> fact, teaches the I-Law course at Trinity, Ireland’s most prestigious
> university. You can read more about Dr. Ahern here: 
> https://www.tcd.ie/Law/deirdreahern/index.php. I hope you agree with
> me that she’d be a qualified exceptional choice for the Coordination
> Group. Equally, I hope others have people in mind that they would
> like to suggest for either the Coordination Group or for other as yet
> defined consultative processes.
> 
> 3. Please note: “All stakeholders that wish to participate in the
> Cross Community Group may indicate their involvement by submitting
> their names to [log in to unmask] 
> <mailto:[log in to unmask]>.” It would be great to
> get as many members as we can on the Group. The sign on process has
> begun.
> 
> Thanks,
> 
> Ed
> 
> 
> -----Original Message----- From: [log in to unmask] To:
> [log in to unmask] Date: Fri, 15 Aug 2014 06:41:01 +0000 
> Subject: Re: Accountability plan
> 
> Hi all Mho is that the more we are evolving the more we will enter in
> the secret of gods. Really intersting ! Cheers ! -Olévié-
> 
> Rafik Dammak <[log in to unmask] 
> <mailto:rafik.dammak%40GMAIL.COM>> a écrit :
> 
>> Hi Avri,
>> 
>> Thanks, it is definitely an interesting reading :) and as NCSG we
> have to
>> make some actions and that is coming soon.
>> 
>> Best,
>> 
>> Rafik
>> 
>> 
>> 2014-08-15 12:24 GMT+09:00 Avri Doria <[log in to unmask]
> <mailto:avri%40acm.org>>:
>> 
>>> Hi,
>>> 
>>> Well the final plan for the Accountability process seems to be
>>> out.
>>> 
>>> https://www.icann.org/news/announcement-2014-08-14-en
>>> 
>>> I think our next step is to start figuring out how we are going
> to work
>>> with it.  We have done whatever we could to adjust it based on
>>> NCSG principles, but at this point, I think that phase of the
>>> process is pretty much over.  I believe that the effect of the
>>> various GNSO SG letters was positive as I think the process is
>>> better now than the earlier version we saw.  I think there is
>>> stuff I could quibble
> about,
>>> but structurally the plan makes sense to me, and I think it can
> work as
>>> a way for the community, both inside ICANN and the global
> community, to
>>> do something to improve ICANN accountability.  I think it could
> achieve
>>> a lot given the dependency of the transition process on the 
>>> accountability process.
>>> 
>>> It looks like that at least for the next year, it is going to
> involve a
>>> whole bunch of work and steady attention from the SG.  Between
> this and
>>> the transition, we will be busy.  Not to mention the regular
> progression
>>> of GNSO issues that are already important and hard enough.
>>> 
>>> Speaking of the IANA Transtion and the  CWG charter, I have not
> seen the
>>> final version yet, but I do believe that the ICG language was
>>> put
> in as
>>> recommended by Milton.  A few of us (indeed I was not a lone
> voice) also
>>> argued to keep the last line we had indicating that the IANA 
>>> accountability issues were in scope for the CWG on IANA
>>> transition. I think we got that in, but I am not positive yet.  I
>>> am hoping the
> SOACs
>>> approve the charter quickly as once that happens the group can
> start to
>>> work.
>>> 
>>> 
>>> avri
>>> 
> 

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