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RE: [ga] DNSO ICANN board member


Greetings:

Since you called my name, I will answer, at least in part. Working within
the United Nations system, in my case for UNIDO (UN Industrial Development
Org) is a great way to learn more than you might want to know about
International policy. UNIDO is the only UN agency with a mandate to assist
the private sector- although the request for project assistance must come
from a government.

The object of the game is to successfully put down some kind of development
that adds jobs, boosts the (local) economy, does not offend anyone
politically, provides a product or service that can make it past GATT and
WTO restrictions and be exported somewhere, and make enough business sense
to get world bank financing. An added benefit is ffor the project to become
self-sustaining and pay off the loans.

On second thought, working with global Internet policy may be more of a
challenge. Consensus building work can be very satisfying, once the process
is complete. It does require patience. Perhaps it is the ultimate democracy.

regards

Peter de Blanc



-----Original Message-----
From: owner-ga@dnso.org [mailto:owner-ga@dnso.org]On Behalf Of Dave
Crocker
Sent: Wednesday, August 23, 2000 12:12 AM
To: Jonathan Weinberg
Cc: Harald Tveit Alvestrand; ga@dnso.org
Subject: Re: [ga] DNSO ICANN board member


At 09:57 AM 8/22/00 -0400, Jonathan Weinberg wrote:
>At 01:29 AM 8/22/00 -0700, Dave Crocker wrote:
> >focusing on various, vague, general fears, rather than on specific
> >constructive goals or even constructive approaches to making
> >improvements.  There also seems to be an unfortunate lack of
understanding
> >of DNS technical details or even of ICANN's limited scope.
>
>         I was intrigued by Dave's comment, so I took a look at the
> acceptance statements of the various

Jonathan, an interesting exercise.  Thanks for pursuing it.

While what follows might seem critical, it is intended to suggest the
difficulty of evaluating candidates.  The question is how to tell who is
really qualified, and THAT begins with trying to understand requirements of
the job.

(I should dissemble a bit further.  None of what follows is critical of the
people being discussed.  Rather, I'm trying to focus on the criteria.)


>Peter de Blanc (de Blanc established a ccTLD registry, and so presumably
>is familiar with DNS technical details)

The ICANN Board is responsible for global policy of DNS (and IP)
administration.  Having experience with a particular registry is, of
course, helpful.  However it tells us nothing about the person's
understanding of large-scale operations, design or policy issues. They
might have great insight or they might not.  We can't tell.

An auto mechanic might be quite good at auto repair, but would you
automatically assume that they are good at designing a new automobile, or
even able to suggest engineering changes to existing cars?  And just so
there is no confusion:  the answer to both parts is no.)


> >I feel that is our responsibility, as Internet professionals, to
> champion the cause of outreach to under serviced populations. . . .

All of this text that you quoted is really general platitudes.  Not
negative, and that's nice, but it tells us nothing about what the person
knows or how they might decide particular issues.  (To be fair, of course,
the application form did not solicit such detail.  For those voting,
however, it would be helpful to get it.)


>James P. Love

Given that James and I have had strong exchanges and seem to hold strongly
different views, it's worth noting that most if the text you quoted from
him is far more concrete than the usual platitudes provided in such forms.


>>e.   ICANN should not require new TLD registries to sign contractual
>>provisions or make other assurances that they will not participate in
>>alternative root systems.  I am not aware of any evidence that such
>>alternatives present problems for the Internet, and ICANN should avoid
>>practices that will be seen as monopolistic or anticompetitive.

Most of the statements pertain to fuzzier aspects of legitimate social (and
legal) policy and, therefore, can reasonably be debated.  This one,
however, falls victim to the efforts at trying to move technical realities
and constraints into that fuzzier area.  That is, it tries to pretend that
technical issues are not technical issues.  We had all better be very
careful that ICANN does not start trying to make rules that violate
technical realities, such as the nature of the DNS root.

d/

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