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Meeting | Date and Time | Assignee and RALO | Report | ||||||||
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Constituent Stakeholder Travel Guidelines Update & Review | 9 April 2013, 16:00-17:00 | Tijani BEN JEMAA | Rapport_Constituent Stakeholder Travel Guidelines | ||||||||
New gTLD SSR Update | 8 April 2013, 1500-1630 | Julie Hammer |
General Points
Discussion on SAC057 - Internal Name Certificates Certificate Authorities (CAs)
Browser Vendors
Other Applications
Other Issues and Concerns
Letter from Paypal
New Measurements
Conclusion There was a call to the community to identify any other issues and concerns which should be addressed in relation to new gTLDs.
Supplementary Note Mozilla has a Network Security Services (NSS), a set of libraries designed to support cross-platform development of security-enabled client and server applications. This library provides a complete open-source implementation of the crypto libraries used by AOL, Red Hat, Sun, and other companies in a variety of products, including the following:
At the SSAC Public Meeting in Beijing (0800-0900 Thursday 11Apr12), it was revealed by a member of the CAB Forum that recently Mozilla started the process to adopt the gTLD requirements (ballot 96). Once Mozilla adopts it, the requirement will be binding on all CAs (in NSS), regardless of whether they are CAB Forum members. | ||||||||
DNSSEC for Everybody -- A Beginners' Guide | 8 April 2013, 17:00-18h30 | Yaovi Atohoun | When typing a name in a browser for example, that name must be first translated into a number by a system before the connection can be established. That system is called the Domain Name System (DNS) and it translates names like www.icann.org into the numbers – called Internet Protocol (IP) addresses. ICANN coordinates the addressing system to ensure all the addresses are unique. DNSSEC (DNS Security Extension) is a technology to secure the Domain Name System. During this session, the panelist presented through a sketch a scenario where user is redirected to another website pretending that it is the one he is looking for when there is a security problem. DNNSEC can be implemented by any individual or organization who is handling a Domain name System server or simply a name server. Another session for a half day workshop is scheduled for April 10, 2013. | ||||||||
Thick Whois | 8 April 2013 | Holly Raiche | Thick Whois GNSO Working Group (providing the GNSO Council with a policy recommendation on universal ‘thick’ Whois) looking at the following elements: response consistency, stability, accessibility, impact on privacy and data protection, cost implications, synchronization and migration, authoritativeness, competition in Registry services, existing WHOIS applications, data escrow and Registrar Part 43 WHOIS requirements. Began with a brief explanation of what ‘thick’ and ‘thin’ whois means. For thick, registrar collects data on the registrant, the domain and various contacts, and provides the information to the registry. For thin registries, only the domain data published – but all three data types retained. The WG has reached consensus on most issues – but not all. The issue for this session: privacy. Specifically, looking at the privacy implications for the Registrants who have registered their information in the thin model with the expectation that only domain data would be captured at the Registry during a transitional period where they’ve registered their name in a jurisdiction where there are strong privacy protections in local law? And now that data is going to be published in a Registry where the local law is different. The issue for registrants may arise if they deal with a registrar in a ‘privacy-friendly’ country with strong privacy laws, but the registry is in a jurisdiction with far less stringent privacy laws and registrant data is then made publicly available when all registries are ‘thick’. | ||||||||
Middle East Strategy | 8 April 2013 | Holly Riache | Middle East Strategy : The meeting talked to strategies that are being worked on to improve achieve three goals:
In comments, the CEO of AusRegistry made suggestions including the need for metrics (such as number/percentage of registrations per population, registrations for businesses, number of gTLDs, ccTLDs, and talked of the need to promote local content as a driver. | ||||||||
Multistakeholder Roundtable | 8 April 2013 | Holly Raiche | Multi-Stakeholder Roundtable: First session was on the new gTLDs. Speakers included Jeremy Malcolm, Consumers International, Peter Nettlefold, ViceChair, GAC, Zahid Jamil, Business Constituency, GNSO, Maguy Serad, ICANN Compliance. Malcolm: Focus on end users- names they use, not have. Issues for consumers include the possibility of phishing, software incompatibilities, unclear expectations from the new names. Overall, the impact is likely to be relatively minor – a don’t know, don’t care attitude. Nettlefold: Taken the view that they aren’t keen to object outright, but concerns include issues of defensive registrations, whether there is an implied level of trust with strings. On PICS, there was a need to identify the goal of commitments made in applications. On compliance, there are issues of enforceability, who can raise concerns, who is notified, and what are the enforcement mechanisms. Jamil: Are three stakeholders: the end user, the registrant and the trademark holder. All three should be protected. It is important that confusion is avoided, includingwhether there are IP risks attached to the name. What about scripts other than ASCII, and what about words that are similar? – is nothing in the Trade Mark clearing house to deal with those issues. On PICS, the current obligations are on registries – but what about registrars. Further, the RAA akkiws a oattern of abuse, with no mechanism to deal with it. Finally, developing countries do not have mechanisms to deal with the issues and maya become soft targets. Serad: Compliance has been identifying the gaps in PICS and are building a readiness plan. There will be proactive monitoring for compliance. On enforceability, there is a lack of clarity on whether they are contractual obligations. | ||||||||
Constituent Stakeholder Travel Guidelines Update & Review | 9 April 2013, 16:00-17:00 | Tijani BEN JEMAA | Rapport_Constituent Stakeholder Travel Guidelines
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Whois Working Group | 10 April 2013 | Holly Raiche | Whois Working Group Review of documents published Since then, have been additional negotiations, and has been agreement in principle to additional issues Cautions:
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ICANN Finance Open Session | 10 April 2013, 11:00-12:30 | Tijani BEN JEMAA | Report_ICANN Finance Open Session.pdf
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11 April 2013 | Holly Raiche | Engagement with RIRs – especially APNIC – be aware of events involving RIRs
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Global Stakeholder Engagement | 11 April 2013, 11:00-12:30 | Tijani BEN JEMAA | New gTLD SSR Update | 8 April 2013, 1500-1630 | Julie Hammer | Report on New gTLD SSR Update by SSAC Liaison The Audiocast of the Session can be found at http://beijing46.icann.org/node/37057
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Meeting Strategy Working Group | 11 April 2013, 09:00-10:30 | Eduardo Diaz and others | Members of the MSWG Group: This was the first meeting of the Meeting Strategy Working Group (MSWG). It was mostly an introductory meeting. The agenda was as follows: 1.Welcome 2.Composition 3.Goals 4.Deliverables 5.Organization 6.Schedule 7.AOB (any other business) Please check here for more details: https://community.icann.org/download/attachments/40929548/ICANN_MSWG_Beijing_2013_04_11_fin+%283%29.pdf?version=1&modificationDate=1367251475241 The next meeting will be a telephone conference to be held May 2, 2013 @ 1400UTC. The group agreed to have these calls every two weeks going forward. | ||||||||
ccNSO Study Group on Country and Territory Names | 11 April 2013, 08:00-09:00 | Eduardo Diaz | This was one of the final meetings of the WG. The Study Group was established by a resolution of the ccNSO Council on 8 December 2010. The Study Group was tasked with developing an overview of:
The Study Group is comprised of representatives from across the ICANN stakeholder community and has been conducting its work since May 2011. A Final draft report was discussed and will be shortly presented to the public for comments. Final draft recommendations from the group are:
Please check meeting transcript here: Transcript Country Names Beijing.pdf and final draft report here: 2012-03 ccNSO Study Group on Country and Territory Names -Final Report v02.docx
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