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Subject:
From:
Rosemary Sinclair <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Rosemary Sinclair <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 4 May 2010 17:16:50 +1000
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Avri

I like the EC discretion based on Principles in any case!

Back to the Uni/Academic - could it be that the new member indicates
whether they are joining in their individual registrant capacity (with
educational interests) or that they are joining on behalf of THE
University (in an "official" representative capacity) to represent the
views of a large academic institution....

Cheers

Rosemary

Rosemary Sinclair
Managing Director, ATUG
Chairman, INTUG
T: +61 2 94958901  F: +61 2 94193889
M: +61 413734490 
Email: [log in to unmask]
Skype: rasinclair
 
Please visit the ATUG website for Updates and Information
www.atug.com.au 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: Non-Commercial User Constituency
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Avri Doria
Sent: Tuesday, 4 May 2010 3:30 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Proposed disposition - Re: Sinclair comments - Members
review of Draft Proposed NCSG Charter

Hi,

Thanks for this response.

I accept that your rewording is much better then mine, and will use that
as the candidate change.

The topic of someone being an individual member as well as a member by
virtue of belonging to an organization is challenging for me.

At one end of the spectrum, having one member of a university faculty
when the university is also a member seems easy to accept.

On the other hand if 20 members of an advocacy NGO were members as well
as their organization, it could produce a skew in the voting.  Yes, I
know this is an extreme example, but it points to a problem.

I think up until now, it was an either or situation, but the individual
membership category is relatively new and I do not think it has been
considered.  The issue has not been specifically covered in the Charter,
except in clause 2.2.5 (3) that says:

This person can join NCSG in his or her individual capacity. The
Executive Committee shall, at its discretion, determine limits to the
total number of Individual members who can join from any single
organization (provided the limit shall apply to all Organizations
equally).

Using you as the test case based on what you mentioned: If I follow the
reasoning in the charter, while you could still join as an individual
based upon being a non-commercial registrant, the membership criteria as
a member of the University, assuming it became a member, would be
questionable and might require review by the EC if someone wanted to
remain an individual member solely on that basis.

But I admit there me some ambiguity.  If we want to avoid making an
outright prohibition for such 'dual' membership we may need to leave
such determinations (and there could be other border cases as well) to
the EC.

Do we need some text to handle this issue.  something like:

2.2.6  Membership Issues

In all cases where eligibility for membership is unclear, the Executive
committee shall make a determination based on the Mission and Principles
of the NCSG as well as an interpretation of the membership criteria.  

Opinions?

thanks

a.


On 3 May 2010, at 22:12, Andrew A. Adams wrote:

> 
>> RS-5  2.2.5 On New Individual Members (Deletion)
>> 
>> 3. An Individual who is employed by or a member of a large
noncommercial organization (universities, colleges, large NGOs) and it
is too complicated or the Individual lacks the standing to get his/her
organization to join on an organizational basis. This person can join
NCSG in his or her individual capacity. The Executive Committee shall,
at its discretion, determine limits to the total number of Individual
members who can join from any single organization (provided the limit
shall apply to all Organizations equally).
>> 
>> Delete:   and it is too complicated or the Individual lacks the
standing to get his/her organization to join on an organizational basis.
This
>> 
>> Proposed Handling:  Accept the deletion in principle, but change:
>> 
>> An Individual who is employed by or a member of a large noncommercial
organization
>> 
>> to
>> 
>> An Individual who is employed by or a member of a large non-member
noncommercial organization
> 
> I think this needs some careful wording to avoid confusion in the two
uses of 
> the word member here (One refers to the individual being a member of
an 
> organisation, the other to the organisation not being a member of
NCSG). I 
> think this wording might cause confusion, so perhaps the wording:
> 
> An individual who is employed by or is a member of a large
non-commercial 
> organisation (which is not already a member of NCSG).
> 
> Also, I would like a note making it plain that being employed by an 
> organisation which has legitimate grounds for being an NCSG member
does not 
> preclude someone joining as an individual member on their own rights.
So, for 
> example, I am employed by Meiji University (meiji.ac.jp) in Japan, a 
> non-profit private university. Meiji is entitled to join NCSG under
the 
> proposed new constitution, but so am I. While I _could_ join under the
above 
> clause I am a member of NCUC on the basis of my own domain
registration 
> (a-cubed.info) and also as an academic working on the area of
information 
> ethics, which includes IANA and DNS related issues. I'd hate to be
forced out 
> because my employer joined NCSG as an organisation.
> 
> 
> -- 
> Profesor Andrew A Adams       [log in to unmask]
> Professor at Graduate School of Business Administration, and
> Deputy Director of the Centre for Business Information Ethics
> Meiji University, Tokyo, Japan
> 
> 
> 

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