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Notes/ Action Items Action Items: ACTION ITEM: WG members to go back to their representative groups to determine if there are any issues that need to be brought forward to the WG, but particularly the question of whether the 60-day lock for CoR should be removed, and replacing affirmation confirmation requirements with notification. See Key Elements of CoR (table on page 8) at: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1gu4sXGvyJeWJIfvaK_I7GKA6lAdfKFPQKaN4UMgzmcE/edit. ACTION ITEM: WG members to review the 60-day lock Working Document at https://docs.google.com/document/d/1SFMDrDazU7iM-1_mvf05ZMQ-ZS2GVJ1mtIXZNcI7F1E/edit and provide comments/suggestions to the charter questions beginning on page 3. Notes: - Jim Galvin – His employer Donuts has rebranded to Identity Digital. Otherwise everything is the same. See: https://community.icann.org/display/gnsosoi/James+M+Galvin+SOI. 2. Welcome and Chair Updates - Public comment period for the Phase 1(a) Initial Report closes on 02 August. Please get your comment in. 3. WG Analysis of Key Elements of CoR (continued from previous meeting) – see: working document at: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1gu4sXGvyJeWJIfvaK_I7GKA6lAdfKFPQKaN4UMgzmcE/edit (table on page 8) Impose a 60-day inter-registrar transfer lock, unless the Registered Name Holder had previously opted out (Section II.C.2). WG Notes: II.C.2 The Registrar must impose a 60-day inter-registrar transfer lock [footnote 4] following a Change of Registrant, provided, however, that the Registrar may allow the Registered Name Holder to opt out of the 60-day inter-registrar transfer lock prior to any Change of Registrant request. WG Notes: ACTION ITEM: WG members to go back to their representative groups to determine if there are any issues that need to be brought forward to the WG, but particularly the question of whether the 60-day lock for CoR should be removed, and replacing affirmation confirmation requirements with notification. See Key Elements of CoR (table on page 8) at: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1gu4sXGvyJeWJIfvaK_I7GKA6lAdfKFPQKaN4UMgzmcE/edit. 4. Review applicability of use cases/case studies from IRTP-C – see: Annex G of the Final Report on pages 72 – 77, at: https://gnso.icann.org/sites/default/files/filefield_34607/irtp-c-final-report-09oct12-en.pdf Case 1: Change Registrar: This falls under current IRTP policy. Mike wants to move his domain from one registrar to another. No other parties involved. Because the Registrant hasn’t changed, Registrant info must remain the same and the “waive lock” option is not needed or presented Case 2: Change Registrar: Mary (a business owner) wants to buy a domain from Mike for use in her business. She and Mike are using the same registrar. Because she plans to use the name for a long (me, and wants to protect it from hijacking, she leaves the lock in place. Case 3: Waive the Registrar Hopping Safeguard: Susan (a domain investor) wants waive the lock in anticipation of a future transaction Case 4: Change Registrant AND Registrar: Ann (an individual) wants to buy a domain from Mike for use for her blog. She and Mike are NOT using the same registrar. Because she plans to use the name for a long time, and wants to protect it from hijacking, she leaves the lock in place. Case 5: Change Registrant and Registrar and Waive Safeguard: Susan (a domain investor) wants to buy a domain asset from Mike. She and Mike are NOT using the same registrar. Because she wants the flexibility to sell the name, and has sophisticated antihijacking of her own, she waives the lock. Case 6: Minor Change to Registrant Information: Nathalie (a recently married blogger) wants to update her Registrant information to her married name. Because she has no plans to transfer her domain and wants to protect from hijacking, she declines the opportunity to waive the lock when it’s presented by her registrar. Note: technically this is identical to Use Case 2. Case 7: Minor change to Registrant information, waiving the post<change lock: Nele (an unhappy registrar customer) wants to make a minor change to her registrant information. She is willing to waive the safeguard in order to have the option to quickly transfer to a new registrar. Discussion: 60-day lock policy questions: d4) Survey responses and data provided by ICANN’s Global Support Center indicate that registrants do not understand the 60-day lock and express frustration when it prevents them from completing an inter-registrar transfer. Does the 60-day lock meet the objective of reducing the incidence of domain hijacking? What data is available to help answer this question? Is the 60-day lock the most appropriate and efficient mechanism for reducing the incidence of hijacking? If not, what alternative mechanisms might be used to meet the same goals? Are there technical solutions, such as those using the control panel or two-factor authentication, or other alternatives that should be explored? d5) Survey responses and data provided by ICANN’s Global Support Center and Contractual Compliance Department indicate that registrants have expressed significant frustration with their inability to remove the 60-day lock. If the 60-day lock is retained, to what extent should there be a process or options to remove the 60-day lock? d6) Due to requirements under privacy law, certain previously public fields, such as registrant name and email may be redacted by the registrar. Is there data to support the idea that the lack of public access to this information has reduced the risk of hijacking and has therefore obviated the need for the 60-day lock when underlying registrant information is changed? d7) In its survey response, the Registrar Stakeholder Group indicated that the 60-day lock hinders corporate acquisitions, consolidations, and divestitures of large lists of domains to new legal entities. To what extent should this concern be taken into consideration in reviewing the60-day lock? d8) If the policy is retained, are there areas of the existing policy that require clarification? For example, based on complaints received by ICANN Contractual Compliance, the following areas of the policy may be appropriate to review and clarify: [see examples] Discussion: ACTION ITEM: WG members to review the 60-day lock Working Document at https://docs.google.com/document/d/1SFMDrDazU7iM-1_mvf05ZMQ-ZS2GVJ1mtIXZNcI7F1E/edit and provide comments/suggestions to the charter questions beginning on page 3. 5. AOB -- Next session: Tuesday 19 July at 16:00 UTC |