I agree with Adam, I too have a problem with that part:
"Law enforcement and trademark protection representatives will be
granted
full access to
puntCAT database. An IP white list will be established to provide
full
access to gather all
data associated with any concrete domain name."
First - the Internet is a 0 dimensional universe that is not owned
by any one nation. So what does the word "Law Enforcement" mean?
American only - or ANY country. Seems to me that it would have to
mean any country as all countries are theoretically equal on the
Internet.
As the founder of the Church of Reality I'm someone who would be put
to death in many countries of the world and I can not be subject to
"law enforcement" of countries like Iran. The same is true to a
lesser degree of all non-Islamic religions and possibly some version
of Islam. I can not be subject to nations who consider my religions
blasphemy.
As to trademark protection - I own the US Registered Trademark on
the word "REALITY".
Serial Number:
78735626.
http://www.churchofreality.org/wisdom/trademark/
if I had special trademark enforcement powers owning the trademark
on REALITY, well, I really don't think you should give me that kind
of power. If I control REALITY on the Internet - wouldn't that make
me a deity? I don't think that's a good idea.
ICANN and DNS is not about law enforcement, trademark, or
intellectual property protection. It's not about protecting people's
money. Our mission is to make the Internet work and nothing more.
These issues are outside the scope of our mission and we need to
draw a hard bright line and tell these people no.
On 1/21/2012 6:49 PM, Nicolas Adam wrote:
[log in to unmask]" type="cite">Very
sharp cursory look. I also think those points need be raised.
Nicolas
On 1/21/2012 12:33 PM, Timothe Litt wrote:
I had a cursory look at the supporting
documents for this.
(http://www.icann.org/en/registries/rsep/puntcat-cat-request-05oct11-en.pdf)
In general, I think that the request moves practice in the right
direction.
However, I am somewhat concerned by the following language:
"Law enforcement and trademark protection representatives will
be granted
full access to
puntCAT database. An IP white list will be established to
provide full
access to gather all
data associated with any concrete domain name."
("IP" clearly means "IP address" if you read the whole
document.)
A) What is a "trademark protection representative", and why are
they granted
equal access to the privacy-protected data of natural persons as
law
enforcement?
B) Why can't they use the webform proxy for contacting the
domain owner, or
present a case to law enforcement for access if the owner is
unresponsive?
C) It also seems that both have the ability to troll thru the
database at
will for any purpose, without cause, judicial review or
documenting when and
why private information is accessed.
D) Note that this ability is based on IP address - not an X.509
certificate,
password or any other user-specific security mechanism. Hence
is is
susceptible to IP spoofing, and access is not traceable to the
individual
accessing the data. This makes it difficult (impossible?) to
hold anyone
accountable for misuse of these privileges.
E) Also, disclosure is described as "opt-in (default option)" -
as the
following language in the document makes clear, privacy is not
the default
and must be requested. This is not consistent with maximizing
privacy, and
potentially introduces race conditions if establishing the
privacy option is
not atomic with registering a domain. For natural persons,
privacy should
be the default.
Thus, although this is a positive step in the direction of
protecting the
privacy of natural persons, there is room for improvement.
I leave to those more experienced in the politics of ICANN the
political
question of whether to take what's on offer now and fight the
next battle
later, or to raise these points in our comment on the current
request.
Timothe Litt
ACM Distinguished Engineer
---------------------------------------------------------
This communication may not represent the ACM or my employer's
views,
if any, on the matters discussed.
-----Original Message-----
From: NCSG-Discuss [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On
Behalf Of Wendy
Seltzer
Sent: Saturday, January 21, 2012 11:50
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [NCSG-Discuss] .CAT WHOIS Proposed Changes - call
for public
comments
.CAT proposes to revise its Registry agreement to support
withholding of
some WHOIS data by individuals who opt out. It will not offer
this opt-out
to legal persons.
I propose that NCSG support this amendment, with a simple: "NCSG
supports
the availability of WHOIS privacy options for natural persons.
Accordingly, we support puntCAT's proposed amendment."
--Wendy
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [council] .CAT WHOIS Proposed Changes - call for public
comments
Date: Fri, 20 Jan 2012 14:08:05 -0800
From: Glen de Saint Géry<[log in to unmask]>
To: [log in to unmask]<[log in to unmask]>
http://www.icann.org/en/announcements/announcement-20jan12-en.htm
.CAT WHOIS Proposed Changes
Forum Announcement: Comment Period Opens on Date: 20 January2012
Categories/Tags: Contracted Party Agreements
Purpose (Brief):
ICANN is opening today the public comment period for the
Fundacio puntCAT's,
request to change its Whois according to EU data protection
legislation. The
public comment period will be closed on 3 March 2012.
The .cat registry, submitted a Registry Service Evaluation
Process
(RSEP) on August 2011.
At this time, ICANN has conducted a preliminary review in
accordance with
the Registry Services Evaluation Policy and process set forth at
http://www.icann.org/registries/rsep/rsep.html. ICANN's
preliminary review
(based on the information provided) did not identify any
significant
competition, security, or stability issues.
The implementation of the request requires an amendment to the
.cat Registry
Agreement signed 23 September 2005. This public forum requests
comments
regarding the proposed amendment.
Public Comment Box Link:
http://www.icann.org/en/public-comment/cat-whois-changes-18jan12-en.htm
Glen de Saint Géry
GNSO Secretariat
[log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>
http://gnso.icann.org