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Members:    Alan Greenberg, Athina Fragkouli, Becky Burr, Bruce Tonkin, Cheryl Langdon-Orr, Izumi Okutani, Jordan Carter, Jorge Villa, Julia Wolman, Julie Hammer, Leon Sanchez, Mathieu Weill, Pär Brumark, Robin Gross, Samantha Eisner, Sébastien Bachollet, Steve DelBianco, Thomas Rickert, Tijani Ben Jemaa   (19)

Participants:  Aarti Bhavana, Andrew Sullivan, Asha Hemrajani, Avri Doria, Barrack Otieno, Brett Schaefer, Cherine Chalaby, Christopher Wilkinson, David McAuley, Edward Morris, Finn Petersen, Gary Hunt, Greg Shatan, Harold Arcos, Jonathan Zuck, Jorge Cancio, Kavouss Arasteh, Keith Drazek, Markus Kummer, Martin Boyle, Mary Uduma, Matthew Shears, Maura Gambassi, Megan Richards, Mike Chartier, Niels ten Oever, Pedro da Silva, Rinalia Rahim, Sabine Meyer, Seun Ojedeji, Sivasubramanian Muthusamy, Steve Crocker, Suzanne Woolf, Tatian Tropina, Tom Dale, Wolf-Urich Knoben   (36)

Legal Counsel:  Edward McNicholas, Mike Clark, Nancy McGlamery, Rosemary Fei

Guests/Observers: John Poole, Jonathan Robinson, Manal Ismail, Maciej Tomaszewski, Mike Silber, Navid Heyrani

Staff:  Alice Jansen, Bernie Turcotte, Brenda Brewer, Laena Rahim, Marika Konings, Nigel Hickson, Theresa Swinehart, Yuko Green

Apologies:  Mark Carvell

**Please let Brenda know if your name has been left off the list (attendees or apologies).**


Transcript

Recording

Agenda

1. Welcome, Roll Call, SoI (5 min) 

2. Rec 4 - Board removal liability mitigation - Second reading (30 min)

3. Rec 12 - WS2 - Second reading (30 min) -
see http://mm.icann.org/pipermail/accountability-cross-community/2016-January/009303.html

4. Rec 7 Scope of IRP - First reading (30 min) -
see http://mm.icann.org/pipermail/accountability-cross-community/2016-January/009486.html

**Break (10 min)**

5. Rec 6 - Human rights - First reading (30 min) - see http://mm.icann.org/pipermail/accountability-cross-community/2016-January/009487.html

6. Rec 5 - Mission - Update on ad hoc meeting (30 min)

7. Marrakech meeting (10 min) 

8. A.O.B (5 min)

Notes

Action Items

Documents

Adobe Chat

 

  Brenda Brewer: (1/11/2016 16:36) Welcome to CCWG Accountability Meeting #76 on Tuesday, 12 January @ 06:00 UTC!  Please note that chat sessions are being archived and follow the ICANN Expected Standards of Behavior: http://www.icann.org/en/news/in-focus/accountability/expected-standards 

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (23:36) HI BRENDA

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (23:36) hI Robin & Tijani

 

  Tijani BEN JEMAA: (23:44) Hi Kavouss and all

 

  Robin Gross [GNSO - NCSG]: (23:45) Hello from San Francisco, Kavouss and all!

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (23:50)  HI Martin

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (23:50) Happy New ear

 

  Martin Boyle, Nominet: (23:50) Morning all

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (23:50) Have not heard from you for sometime

 

  Martin Boyle, Nominet: (23:50) Morning Kavouss - and a happy New Year to you, too

 

  Martin Boyle, Nominet: (23:52) No:  on a break!  Family holiday period, then retired from Nominet and then returned to Nominet as a consultant

 

  Martin Boyle, Nominet: (23:52) But just for the IANA transition & related work

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (23:52) Good that you got back

 

  Martin Boyle, Nominet: (23:54) well mainly a man of leisure now - hence the long holiday break

 

  Martin Boyle, Nominet: (23:54) did you get a bit if a break?

 

  Martin Boyle, Nominet: (23:54) and are you fully recovered now?

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (23:55) Not exactly,

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (23:55) hi all

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (23:56) Hi all

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (23:56) Column Verbetlral is a sensitive part of body and it take time for full recover. But I did work very hard for CCWG EVEN DURING MY HOSPITALISATION

 

  Martin Boyle, Nominet: (23:57) yes, i saw

 

  Martin Boyle, Nominet: (23:57) are you reasonably able to move around now?

 

  Niels ten Oever: (23:57) Hi all

 

  Pär Brumark (GAC Niue): (23:58) Hi all!

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (23:58) BONJOUR mATHIEU

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (23:58) Bonjour Kavouss

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (23:58) cOMMENT VAS-TU?

 

  Bernard Turcotte Staff Support: (23:58)  good day all

 

  nigel hickson: (23:58) good morning from a dark Budapest

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (23:59) Cop-Chairs and Staff

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (23:59) THANK YOU FOR ALL WELL PREPARED MEETING AND GOOD ORGANISATION OF THE WORK

 

  Bernard Turcotte Staff Support: (23:59) Usual reminder to mute if not speaking please

 

  Thomas Rickert, CCWG Co-Chair: (23:59) Hi all!

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (23:59) Much appreciated Kavouss, thank you !

 

  Athina Fragkouli (ASO): (1/12/2016 00:00) hello all!

 

  Tatiana Tropina: (00:00) Hello everyone!

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:01) Good night from New York.

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:01) 1076th call, I think you must mean

 

  Sabine Meyer: (00:02) Hello everyone!

 

  Brenda Brewer: (00:02) Barrack Otieno on audio only and muted.

 

  Keith Drazek: (00:02) The CCWG finally passed the CWG in number of calls...76 to 74. Condolences to colleagues who have participated in BOTH. 

 

  Maura Gambassi- IT: (00:02) hi! good morning from Rome

 

  Avri Doria: (00:03) Keith, it is becoming a way of life one becomes used to.

 

  Keith Drazek: (00:03) Ain't that the truth....

 

  Cheryl Langdon-Orr (CLO)  ALAC - APRegional Member: (00:04) YUP

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:06) @Keith, condolences accepted....

 

  Rosemary Fei (Adler & Colvin): (00:07) I'm now in the Adobe room.  Hello, everyone!

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (00:08) Congrats Rosemary !

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:09) Bruce, that does not strike me as particularly "fulsome," thankfully.

 

  Alan Greenberg: (00:09) Thanks Bruce. That is both helpful and reasonable. Presumably the ugly word "fulsome" will not show up in the Bylaws!  ;-)

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (00:10) Thomas, at the second reading, once you make a summary , pls ask the Board representatives whether they have further commnents to make and whether are are haoppy with the outcome

 

  Alan Greenberg: (00:11) I thonk that he said they were incomfortable with waiving rights AND indemnifying.

 

  Alan Greenberg: (00:11) Uncomfortable

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (00:12) We need to address all Board's concerns to the extent possible and as far as the time constrain permits

 

  Avri Doria: (00:13) i decding that a Board member is not clever enough to understand what is going on accceptable cause?

 

  Avri Doria: (00:13) is deciding ...

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:14) since someone here will know - why aren't there term limits on the four liaison (de-facto members of) the ICANN Board?

 

  Avri Doria: (00:14) becasue none were ever defined?

 

  Asha Hemrajani: (00:14) Greetings all...Finally managed to get into Adobe

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:15) hi Asha!

 

  Asha Hemrajani: (00:15) Hello Jordan

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (00:15) Welcome Asha !

 

  Asha Hemrajani: (00:15) Bonjour Mathieu

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:15) We did discuss on our call today if there was a way fpor ICANn to provide some form of indemnifcation.   The legal advice we receivede was that woul dbe hard to do.   ANy new text I can certainly take back on that specific point.

 

  Asha Hemrajani: (00:16) ca va Mathieu?

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (00:16) Thomas, Pls ask whether Board has any further comments

 

  Avri Doria: (00:16) I expect that the non-voting Board members would be immune from these considerations.

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (00:16) Avri+1

 

  Alan Greenberg: (00:16) @Jordan, also note that the terms of Liaisons are not the same as for Board members.

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:17) yes, i am just interested in the principle behind the difference

 

  Avri Doria: (00:17) The non voting seats are permanent seats at the discretion of the appointing organization.

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:18) Why does the rationale need to be "comprehensive"?

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:18) +1 Alan

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (00:19) tHOMAS , In the last part added pls replace " is2 by "wll"

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (00:19) Will

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:19) Avri: like Permanent Security Council members? ;-)

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:19) @Avri, so I guess those organizations already have the discretion to change their liaison.

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:19) The issue of potential liability to community members for action taken during the Board removal process raises some concerns for Board members, particularly around the suggested mitigation of using pre-service letters to obtain waivers from Board members that they will not sue community members for conduct in the Board removal process.  The Board does not support the use of a waiver clause in pre-service letters (or the full indemnification clause), making service on the Board subject to waiving any manner of conduct from a large group of potential actors.  That does not seem to enhance accountability.    The Board notes the CCWG-Accountability’s insertion of a requirement to subject both NomCom and AC/SO appointed directors to the same process (including conversations with the Board Chair), as well as highlighting the need for consideration of independence in selecting replacement directors.  Additionally, the Board notes the CCWG-Accountability insertion of a requirement for a written rationale to accompa

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:20) I would have thought that comprehensive just means - identify the actual reasons, don't leave out the main one/s.

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:20) My concern is that a lack of "comprehensiveness" could be used to challenge the validity of a rationale.  If we don't need it, why have it.

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (00:20) Why , if appropriate ? who decides if it is appropriate, may be we replace by if requested by the Board in question

 

  Avri Doria: (00:20) Jordan, no, the security council member seat are voting, infact vetoing, seats.

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:20) Avri: true

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:21) The have sent the text above as a Board position on the email mailing list

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:21) @Jordan, if some SO/AC left out the main reasons, do you think they would be convincing to the other SO/ACs?

 

  Andrew Sullivan: (00:22) It would be good to be clear about whether "non-voting board members" (i.e. liaisons) are indeed included

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:22) Greg, it's hardly likely "writtenness" would be material to that, I don't think.

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:22) And if they were able to convince the SO/ACs without their main reasons expressed, isn't that good enough?

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:22) Non-voting board members clearly aren't subject to the recall process, is your question Andrew about whether they need to sign such letters?

 

  Andrew Sullivan: (00:22) yes

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:22) I don't have a particular concern about whether it is "comprehensive".   I would assume that it wuld need to be at enough level of detila of the SO or AC to reach agreement that it is a suifficient reason to remove the Baord director.

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:23) ZOtherwise I fail to see how the SO or AC member could be doing their jon if they are asked to vote on something without a valid reason.

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:23) Andrew: I think it only applies to those who are nomianted as Directors as per para 39

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:24) I have no problem with the "written" requiement.

 

  Matthew Shears: (00:24) + 1 Greg

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (00:24) Thomas, Pls ask whether Board has any further comments

 

  Steve DelBianco [GNSO - CSG]: (00:24) +1 Greg

 

  Andrew Sullivan: (00:24) (It's worth noting that appointing organizations of liaisons can't actually remove them at any time -- they'd have to ask the rest of the board to do it outside the annual appointment time)

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:24) Comprehensive is not really a compromise, it's just less prone to misunderstanding....

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:24) than "fulsome".

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:25) Thanks!

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:25) Agreed @Greg.   Ulimately it wold end p being written in ne form or other - as the COuncils and ACs call are often transcribed and there are minutes of meetings etc that are published.

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:25) Just saying "written" makes sense to me

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:25) @Jordan, agree.

 

  Alan Greenberg: (00:25) @Jordan, the term "Member" refers only to those appointed by AC/SO/NomCom and the CEO.  Liaisons are not members.

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:26) Alan: yes. My timing wasn't helpful as it didn't really relate to what we are discussing.

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:26) Again, no problem with written.  That is appropriate for transparency, communication and record-keeping concerns.  We are no longer gathering under the old pear tree to do ICANN business, like in the old days.

 

  Avri Doria: (00:26) if one looks at dictionaries, fulsome is indeed the wrong word:  unpleasantly and excessively suave or ingratiating in manner or speech. Comprehensive does not mean complete, it means including many components.

 

  Rosemary Fei (Adler & Colvin): (00:26) Should there be a "no" at the beginning of this sentence in the notes?  "Restrictions are put on ability to state rationale.I"

 

  Alan Greenberg: (00:26) We are asking for a spirited public discussion of the potential removal.

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (00:27) Agree Rosemary

 

  Steve Crocker: (00:27) @Jordan, you asked why aren't there term limits on the liaisons?  At the time the current bylaws were formulated in 2002 and the liaisons were added to the Board, it was expected they would be less active in the Board than they have turned out to be.  They do not have voting rights, and it was imagined they be silent unless spoken to.  In practice, the liaisons are treated as nearly similar to voting Board members, as you have noted.  The formal rule is they are appointed annually by the GAC, RSSAC, SSAC and IETF.  In practice, these appointments have been renewed for several years.  SSAC has adopted an internal rule of choosing its liaison for three year periods, with the possibility of renewal.  That means they make a formal decision internally once every three years and then inform the corporate secretary annually of their (automatic) renewal.  I believe they will tend to limit the number of three year terms their liaison will have, but we do not yet have the first example.

 

  Keith Drazek: (00:27) @Thomas: Yes.

 

  Izumi Okutani (ASO): (00:27) I agree with Thomas' summary

 

  Izumi Okutani (ASO): (00:27) I think it's a good balance and a reasonable way forward

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:28) Steve, thanks, that's very kind of you to share - makes lots of sense.

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:28) IMy hand has now evaporated.

 

  Steve Crocker: (00:29) @Jordan, in practice, the continuity and experience of the liaisons has worked out well in practice.  In principle, it would be possible for one of the ACs to insert a troublesome person onto the Board and have that person remain indefinitely.  If that happened, I expect there would be some infomral interactions in response.

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:29) I don't see why Kavouss's process step is required - any more than it should be asked of other COs?

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:30) Steve - "informal interactions" - love it. :)  Thanks for the background

 

  Alan Greenberg: (00:30) Leaving the community members unprotected is problematic as well.

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:31) What is the reason for the Board's opposing the waiver?

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:31) I think the protection of ICANN Participants is best achieved by the last part of that para

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:32) asking Board members to waive their rights seems.... troublesome, at best.

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (00:33) This is a sensitive issue and must be properly addressed

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:33) It is only the right to sue the SO/ACs or their members for being removed, or statements in that process.  It's not a broad waiver.

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:33) It is also unlikely to happen that ICANN the organization would indemnifies thousands of peopel from saying whatever they like.

 

  Avri Doria: (00:34) Aren't they public person who are subject to the slings and arrows of outrage?

 

  Alan Greenberg: (00:34) @Bruce. I understand, which is why the waiver was attractive.

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:34) What I do understand is that our insruance does provide some covnerage with respect o involvement in policy development.

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:34) by members of the SOs and ACs.

 

  Alan Greenberg: (00:34) A removed director who might claim loss of future income because they have not become tainted is a very real possibility.

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (00:35) Whenver, we refer to chair of AC7So we need to add the following, " in consultastion with and agreement of the corresponding AC7 SO2 as we should not delegate the rights and authority of any SO 7 Ac to its chair

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:35) that must be unsupportable as a claim for a removed governor, surely, Alan.

 

  Avri Doria: (00:35) Alan, why would that be the case more for a director than for any other public person?

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:36) Yes - my comments were not about jus thte chair - I was assumiong all Concil members of an SO and members of an AC that actually take part in a decision process to rmove a director - ie vote in the process.

 

  Alan Greenberg: (00:36) I would not think an ICANN director is viewed as a public persona as someone in national polictics (or whatever) would be.

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:36) People should face the consequences of their actions - so what we need to get to in that last item is a reasonable freedom for people to say what they think in any removal proceedings, but not protection for outrageous or scurrilous attacks.

 

  Steve Crocker: (00:36) Re "liaison" vs "non-voting director", I had been in favor of using the latter term in order to recognize the fact that these people have tended to perform pretty much as regular directors.  (The main exception has been the GAC liaison.  The GAC has made it a practice to appoint their chair as the liaison to the Board, and the GAC chair is often unable to attend all of the Board meetings and to serve on Board committees.)  I have recently been informed by our general counsel that the term "non-voting director" might pose a difficulty within the interpretation of California law.  I don't immediately recall the details, but it has caused me to stop using the term "non-votiing director."  We can recover the details if there's interest.

 

  Greg Shatan: (00:36) Bruce, we are not discussing "thousands" of people, saying "whatever they like."  We are only talking about SO/ACs and their members providing rationales for removing Board members.

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (00:37) Thank you Mathieu in rasing that point to Board

 

  Avri Doria: (00:38) Steve, but if they function as non-voting directors, including hold committee posts, shouldn't we call it like it is?

 

  Sabine Meyer: (00:38) Not if a "director" in the legal sense is voting by definition, I would assume.

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:38) I would have thought that liaisons shouldn't perform as if they were directors, but anyhow

 

  Avri Doria: (00:39) but except for voting, they do.

 

  Alan Greenberg: (00:39) Voting and being able to make and second motions

 

  Rosemary Fei (Adler & Colvin): (00:39) The CA nonprofit corporate law specifies that people who do not vote are not within the term director as used in the law.

 

  Sabine Meyer: (00:40) Thank you, Rosemary!

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (00:40) Mathieu, thank you again to be so clear with the Board's concerns raised before

 

  Keith Drazek: (00:41) I support a defined list of WS-2 issues, rather than open-ended.

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:41) OUr preference is that the last sentence of paragraph 5 shoudl state:

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:41) The bylaw would task the group with creating further enhancement to ICANN's accountabiliuty be limited to the work stream 2 list of issues

 

  Avri Doria: (00:42) Keith, makes sense to me as well.

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:42) No issues with me in "limited to" - we aren't trying to create a new Neverending Story

 

  Matthew Shears: (00:42) Perhaps it would be useful to add a note that futher items beyond those enumerated in WS2 could be accomodated through regular review cycles

 

  Sébastien (ALAC): (00:43) Are we sure that the community can raise any issue within ATRT?

 

  Alan Greenberg: (00:43) @Sebastien, I beleive that we have inserted a change to the ATRT to allow that.

 

  Avri Doria: (00:44) I beleive any accountabilty issues can be discussed.  Son not any issue, but any accountabilty issue.

 

  Brett Schaefer: (00:44) Does this mean that the Board is satisfied with HR language in Rec 12?

 

  Avri Doria: (00:44) we also cannot predict all possible future accountabilty issues.

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:44) we have changed the ATRTs

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:45) Board comment:

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:45) First, the Board agrees that a transitional bylaw can be used to define the Board’s commitment on WS2 matters.  Second, the effort anticipated in WS2 should be performed through cross community working groups chartered by multiple groups across ICANN, effort and not all work must be done by the existing CCWG-Accountability.  Third, the Board agrees that it will treat consensus based-recommendations on the limited list of WS2 topics (set out in the CCWG-Accountability’s redline) just as it will consider the consensus-based WS1 recommendations from the CCWG-Accountability.  Fourth, the Board does not support the inclusion of a timeline for the required completion of WS2 efforts in the transitional Bylaw.  Finally, the Board supports that the costs of WS2 must be subject to the budgetary process for the year.  If the budget is exhausted and additional resources are necessary, the chartering organizations must support a request for Board consideration on additional funding.

 

  Avri Doria: (00:45) WS2 was alwasy supposed to be bounded.

 

  Keith Drazek: (00:46) Agreed Avri.

 

  Becky Burr: (00:46) we may need to add "consumer trust" to WS2

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:46) I guess we don't want to cut off reasonably related and secondary matters related to the primary list

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:46) but I trust we can all be sensibly flexible on it

 

  Becky Burr: (00:46) generalized consumer trust as opposed to consumer trust in expansion of TLD space

 

  Matthew Shears: (00:46) + 1 Jordan

 

  Keith Drazek: (00:47) +1 Jordan and Becky

 

  Athina Fragkouli (ASO): (00:47) support this approach and the way forward

 

  Cheryl Langdon-Orr (CLO)  ALAC - APRegional Member: (00:47) excellent progress...THANKS ALL

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:47) An SO and AC can spin off a new CCWG at any time.

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:48) Ultiamtely I think we need to formalize the cross-communiyt working group concept in that same way we have formalized working groups within SOs.

 

  Avri Doria: (00:48) Bruce, they may well do so, but what authoriiy to recommend would it have?

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:49) Bruce: there's a whole CCWG about CCWGs

 

  Alan Greenberg: (00:49) @Sebastien, the AoC gave a prescriptive list of the things the ATRT had to review. THe draft Bylaw says that these are issues that "may merit attention".

 

  Avri Doria: (00:50) Jordan, isn't the CCWG about the modlaieites and methods, not the authority of such groups.

 

  Avri Doria: (00:50) i mean the CCWG CCWG

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (00:50) Isnt it the CWG CCWG ?

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:51) Avri - currently I think the autheotiy is from the chatering orgnazations.   ie Ulimatel the charteing orgnaization can take the output of work like the jopint applicatn support working group0 and recommend it to the Board etc.   Ultiamtely it is these details which I think need to be formalized.   ie If a cross-community working group consists of a minimum of a certain number of SO and Cs makes recommendations then those recomemndations should be treated by the Board usinga similar mechansims as for recomemdnations fro SOs and Acs.

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (00:51) Avri: I haven't followed it closely enough

 

  Avri Doria: (00:51) Bruce, wouldn't that require new byllaws work to make it so?

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:52) @Jordan - yes exactly - I am suggesting that works needs to be picked up again.  I am not aware there is any active work in the CCWG for CCWZG's :-)   I am not enven sure how many SOs and ACs are participating in that work - I do know tha thte GNSO is a participant.

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (00:53) Agreed @Avri - it would result in new bylaws - which would have to go through the wonderful new processes being developed by this CCWG :-)

 

  Becky Burr: (00:54) no, but we can charge the IRP Oversight group with developing those

 

  Becky Burr: (00:55) consistent with CWG recomendation and fundamental bylaws per Jordan

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (00:56) SHould be not just extend standard of review to include PTI bylaws / rules ?

 

  Becky Burr: (00:56) that would also work I think Mathieu

 

  Becky Burr: (00:57) And ICANN Board's failure to ensure that would be actionable, right?

 

  Alan Greenberg: (00:57) As per Martin, the issue could be a contract violation and not Bylaw related.

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (00:57) I am afraid of  changing the type of "outcomes"

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (00:58) Martin+1

 

  Martin Boyle, Nominet: (00:58) @Alan:  I see it as a bylaw

 

  Martin Boyle, Nominet: (00:59) but not one related to PTI butt o ICANN's reponsibility to enforce its contract

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (00:59) @Martin; CWG requirement is also to provide last resort appeal to PTI decisions

 

  Izumi Okutani (ASO): (01:00) Just to confirm my undersstanding, PTI action and inaction is focused on names functions, excluding any matters on protocols and numbers. If so I'm fine with the suggested way forward

 

  Alan Greenberg: (01:00) No objection.  You will recall that the ALAC was originally concerned that the IRP could recommend remedial action instead of just identify a Bylaw problem. If the Implmentation team can unilaterally add new outcomes, then our original concern becomes very real.

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (01:01) Good point Izumi. Noted.

 

  Izumi Okutani (ASO): (01:01) Thanks Mathieu!

 

  Jordan Carter (ccNSO, WP1 rptr): (01:02) at this rate, we can finish this call early!

 

  Becky Burr: (01:04) like the ASO, where disputes are resolved in accordance with MOU

 

  Andrew Sullivan: (01:04) The IETF already has an appeals mechanism

 

  Andrew Sullivan: (01:05) That's the reason the IAB made the comment it did

 

  Andrew Sullivan: (01:05) (It's more a "reconsideration" than "appeals", but that's a detail)

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (01:05) Then pls refer to those existing apeal mechanisms

 

  Izumi Okutani (ASO): (01:06) Leon's summary is correct. this is covered through the SLA - as already shared in our feedback

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (01:07) We will do that Kavouss

 

  Becky Burr: (01:07) @Bruce - need to do that at a minimum!

 

  Becky Burr: (01:08) or give Board (in PDP) authority to reconcile inconsistent decisions

 

  Athina Fragkouli (ASO): (01:08) ust a clarification on numbering issues: disputes on the IANA numbering function are covered in the SLA and disputes on the numbers policy process are covered in the MoU

 

  Becky Burr: (01:09) Yes Malcolm - although I think technically, the challenge would be ICANN Board's failure to ensure consistency with Bylaws

 

  Becky Burr: (01:09) +1 Malcolm, believe that's the case

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:09) @Malcolm - fair enough - but if the experts were self interested - I tink it woudl be overturned by the reconsideration process as it woul dnot be operating consistent with the rules of the process.   So I guess the IRP in that case would be to challenge the Board's decision on that point.

 

  Becky Burr: (01:10) I think we are saying the same thing Bruce

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:10) Yes agreed @Becky

 

  Becky Burr: (01:11) I think this just needs clarification in the text

 

  Brett Schaefer: (01:11) going to discuss d?

 

  Becky Burr: (01:12) DIDP clearly subject to reconsideration, but that is just Board checking itself

 

  Becky Burr: (01:13) so the question is, is that enough?

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (01:13) Is there any difficuties to accept the Board's suggestions?

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:14) I think the DIDP itself needs an appeals process where an indepedent party (e.g Ombudsman) can review the decision.

 

  Becky Burr: (01:14) Any DIDP failure that rises to the level of a Bylaws violation would clearly be covered by IRP.  Question is whether there is more

 

  Rosemary Fei (Adler & Colvin): (01:14) Does this sentence in the notes, " IRP is not there to challenge opinion of experts but should be able to challenge decisions of experts." needs "as conflicting with Bylaws" added at the end?

 

  Becky Burr: (01:14) yes Rosemary

 

  Becky Burr: (01:14) good catch

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (01:14) Good point Rosemary

 

  David McAuley (RySG): (01:15) Some form of discovery will likely relate to IRP process subject to details to be worked out by IRP subgroup – the IRP panel would handle issues around that wouldn’t it?

 

  Becky Burr: (01:16) Although in most governance schemes, there is some sort of truly independent (i.e., judicial) appeal

 

  Becky Burr: (01:17) @ David - yes

 

  Avri Doria: (01:17) Bruce: Are you saying that a DIDP redaction can be currently subjected to reconsideration?

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:17) The Board's comments in our submission in Dec was that appeals processes for the DIDP shudl be part of the improvement

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:18) in work stream 2.   For example we suggest that te Ombudsman could be an indepedent party that could review a staff deicsion on a DIDP.

 

  Steve DelBianco [GNSO - CSG]: (01:20) regarding this IRP document, paragraphs 13-14. For a Community IRP, it says ICANN pays costs for standing panel.  But we also want ICANN to pay legal fees of the sole Designator Community too, right?

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (01:21) Correct Steve. This is described in REc 4 - Community IRP power. We should update to avoid confusion. I note the point

 

  Steve DelBianco [GNSO - CSG]: (01:22) Thanks, Mathieu

 

  Avri Doria: (01:22) what needs to be a bylaws issues: the fact of the DIDP predaction or the issue that one is trying to uncover.

 

  Avri Doria: (01:23) to only be able to apeal a DIDP on a bylaws basis seems odd.

 

  Brett Schaefer: (01:23) agree Avri

 

  Becky Burr: (01:23) Ah - agree Bruce.  But why couldn't we use the panel to provide the independent judicial review

 

  Becky Burr: (01:23) why create a new panel?

 

  Avri Doria: (01:24) As fr as I know, we have no bylaws related to redaction.

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:24) @Becky -= it is jsut that we have an IRP panel for bylaws and articialres of incorporation.

 

  Edward McNicholas (Sidley Austin LLP): (01:25) Perhaps it may be useful to focus on the standard used by the IRP to consider whether a DIDP is proper; not whether it is "substantive" or "procedural" per se

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (01:26) Leon,

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:26) Why not just require that the IDIP have an appeals process where there is an indepdent rreview as part of that process.   We were thinking the ombudsman was indepdent but you could identify another group with expertise in that area .

 

  Avri Doria: (01:26) i am concerned about the prior restraints we are trying to put on the IRP.  creating yet another IRPlike mechanism for operational appelas seems problematic.  Isn't this simlar to the issue of IRP and PTI, in that PTI issues are not likely to be bylaws issues.

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (01:26) We have passed the time that you should have annopunce the Break

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (01:26) Break

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:27) ICNAN has a defined set of resaons for non-disclosure at:

 

  Jordan Carter: (01:27) The break is at half past

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:27) https://www.icann.org/resources/pages/didp-2012-02-25-en

 

  Brett Schaefer: (01:27) @Bruce, that sounds workable, I just didn't want it to slip through unaddressed

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (01:27) No

 

  Avri Doria: (01:27) yes, i know but that list is not bylaws.

 

  Jordan Carter: (01:27) actually 8.35

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:27) I thin it woudl be within the campabiilty of the ombudsmand to verify is the reasons was appropriate by reiewing the source document.

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (01:27) It is at 20 past hour exactly in the middle

 

  Becky Burr: (01:28) the ombudsman is not independent Bruce, unless we dramatically alter the charter.  Also, the Ombuds function isn't by definitiion decisional, unless I am mistaken

 

  Jordan Carter: (01:28) 20 past the hour for 10 mins is not half way through a three hour call...

 

  Brett Schaefer: (01:28) Those DIDP reasons are to be reviewed in WS2, but appeal was to be WS1

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:29) Exactly Avri - but if we try to incorporate every process in our bylaws they will jsut be unworkable.

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:29) WE have lots of proceses - regidtrar accriedtaion, new gtld process, DIDP, etc - each of these processes shoudl have appropraite appeals mechasnims.

 

  Becky Burr: (01:29) correct Malcolm

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (01:29) Jordan, 180-20=160 divided by 2 = 80 ,It means 80 mints = 20 mints past the hour

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:30) At a recosnideration level we do confirm whether a process was followed  - but in many cases people want an issue re-examined by a relevant expert.

 

  Jordan Carter: (01:30) i'm just going by the times noted in the agenda, Kavouss :-)

 

  Becky Burr: (01:30) but I am not sure that it makes any sense to create an additional independent process for DIDP.  I don't think I actually understand Board's concern

 

  Mike Silber: (01:31) has anyone noticed the possibility of conflict of interest, where the standing panel gets to review the IRP process?

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:31) @Becky an IRP panel for a DIDP deicsion sounds like massive over-0kill to me.  THey are usually expenswes processes with legal counsel on both sides etc.

 

  Niels ten Oever: (01:31) Am I the only one who is experiencing audio issues with Adobe today?

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:31) An lighter weight Ombudsman process I think would be more fit for purpose.

 

  Mike Silber: (01:32) no Niels, it seems we all are

 

  David McAuley (RySG): (01:32) no issue here Niels

 

  Becky Burr: (01:32) why is review of Board action on a DIDP a review of the IRP process Mike?  Also, courts manage discovery all the time

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:32) We are just trying to keep the IRP focussed on bylaws and article of incorporation - whch shoudl rarely need to be invoked.

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (01:32) No 17 mints behind the time , see my comments

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:32) I can imaghine though that a DIDP appeal will probably be involved regularly and needs to be lighter wieght and lower cost for the parties wanting to appeal.

 

  Mike Silber: (01:32) Becky - you just missed my point so completely, it is remarkable

 

  Mike Silber: (01:33) here should be ongoing capability for keeping adequacy of IRP process under review in light of experience and with support of standing panel.

 

  Brenda Brewer: (01:33) Break -- Meeting will resume at 15 minutes before top of hour.

 

  Mike Silber: (01:33) it is the "support of the standing panel" that intrigued me. I merely asked if there could be a conflict there?

 

  Becky Burr: (01:33) sorry Mike, there are several conversations going on here.  Not usually thick ...

 

  Keith Drazek: (01:34) ...not to mention it's 2:30am here.

 

  Mike Silber: (01:34) understood :-)

 

  Becky Burr: (01:34) again, I think that judicial bodies often engage in introspection ...

 

  Mike Silber: (01:41) yes indeed. however they are unlikely to streamline themselves and are more likely to call for greater power and resources. So I am just suggesting it be tempered. The SOs and ACs also engage in introspection in their reviews, but their views get tempered

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (01:46) @Mike : change of the IRP would be fundamental bylaw. So it would only be brought in front of the IRP if someone had a complaint about the Board actions or inactions in that process. Not by IRP itself right ? That is the temper for the judicial power ; it can not start a case on its own

 

  Brenda Brewer: (01:46) recordings are going

 

  Keith Drazek: (01:49) I support a deadline for initiation of WS2 processes, but not necessarily a deadline for completion. Our recent experience with deadlines should be instructive. ;-)

 

  Mike Silber: (01:49) @Mathieu: m y comment was about the remark: "there should be ongoing capability for keeping adequacy of IRP process under review in light of experience and with support of standing panel." It has ABSOLUTELY nothing to do with starting a case. It is not being "brought in front of the IRP"

 

  Niels ten Oever: (01:49) Risk not increasing at all, right?

 

  jorge cancio (GAC Switzerland): (01:50) Ok with flexibility on deadline; Not agreeing with deferring to ws2 as a lot of work has already been invested into this phase and according to lawyers increased risks seem not to be an issue

 

  Mike Silber: (01:50) I assume 2.c. should be defer and not differ?

 

  Tatiana Tropina 3: (01:50) 2b. Defer I think

 

  Bernard Turcotte Staff Support: (01:50) yes

 

  Mike Silber: (01:50) yes Tatitaina 2b

 

  Tatiana Tropina 3: (01:51) ALAC and some others

 

  Brenda Brewer: (01:53) Kavouss, your line is open

 

  Jordan Carter: (01:56) dropping off the adobe room for 10, will be on voice

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (01:59) Note the Baord did not discuss this recommendation in our information call today.

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (02:00) With proposed language Markus and I can take the issu eback to the Board.

 

  Tatiana Tropina 3: (02:02) Bruce, Markus, thanks a lot for such a constructive approach.

 

  Tatiana Tropina 3: (02:05) sorry

 

  Tatiana Tropina 3: (02:05) I will be next in the queue

 

  Matthew Shears: (02:06) + 1 it would be good to have a far better understanding of the increased vulnerability concerns related to HR

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (02:07) Yes we can

 

  David McAuley (RySG): (02:07) IMO, a commitment to HR by an organization coordinating DNS (where interests may well clash – e.g. freedom of expression and personal privacy) and which organization itself maintains an appeals process might well need to be litigation-proof until we have time to consider it fully -

 

  Jonathan Zuck/ACT: (02:08) +1 David

 

  Niels ten Oever: (02:08) @david according to the lawyers it is

 

  David McAuley (RySG): (02:08) But FOI is not developed

 

  Niels ten Oever: (02:08) @david eventhough, the lawyers say it is

 

  Niels ten Oever: (02:08) Human rights are not rly a new concept

 

  Greg Shatan: (02:09) I hope we can clarify what the lawyers' advice actually is.

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (02:09) We will receive legal advice in writing in next few days

 

  Tatiana Tropina 3: (02:10) @Greg, that's a nice comment from the lawyer :)

 

  jorge cancio (GAC Switzerland): (02:10) looking forward to seeing that legal advice

 

  Greg Shatan: (02:10) It's too late at night to be a lawyer.

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (02:10) Tijani - which option was your preferred option?

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (02:10) Tijani supports 2b

 

  Tatiana Tropina 3: (02:10) @Greg the same here but too early in the morning :(

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (02:10) @ZGreg - you could become an engineer instead after midnight I suppose.

 

  Niels ten Oever: (02:11) @Tijani - that i currently the case as describied in the bylaw, right?

 

  Asha Hemrajani: (02:11) @bruce @greg I think Greg is an engineer most of the time and only a lawyer during daylight

 

  Megan Richards, European Commission: (02:11) not sure anything, anywhere is "litigation-proof" but ensuring that provisions meet the best requirements possible with least legal "offence" is perhaps best that can be attained

 

  Tatiana Tropina 3: (02:12) agree with Megan, nothing is litigation-proof, the question is whether we will have additional risks

 

  Tatiana Tropina 3: (02:12) not for litigation but for losing the court case. Like vulnerabilities assessment

 

  Matthew Shears: (02:12) + 1 Niels

 

  Tatiana Tropina 3: (02:12) Also +1, Niels

 

  jorge cancio (GAC Switzerland): (02:12) Agree with Niels

 

  Markus Kummer: (02:13) I agree with Niels re 1a

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (02:13) Mathieu, Leon has spent considerale time as the chair of WP4 in so far as inclusion of a verry high level text in the Balwas under work stream 1 and differ the rest to work strean 2. I am not sure what is the problem ? Do we go back to square 1 ( to the discussion which was held several months ago)

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (02:14) Bruce, if the Board opts for option 2b) Does the Board confirm to retaion the high level refernce to HR in the Bylaws under WS1?

 

  Niels ten Oever: (02:16) ccTLD issue has been covered extensively in bylaw

 

  Mike Silber: (02:16) Kavous - it is not for the Board to select an option.

 

  Tatiana Tropina 3: (02:17) ooops... I thought I was the first in the queue :)

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (02:17) Me too , apologies

 

  Tatiana Tropina 3: (02:17) :D

 

  Bruce Tonkin: (02:18) OK by the laws relating to humans vary substantially by country.

 

  Brett Schaefer: (02:19) @Bruce, is the Board wholly supportive of HR language in Annex 12? Just want to see if the HR discussion is focused on timing.

 

  Keith Drazek: (02:20) I support the suggestion of a WS1 hook with dormant treatment until FOI is completed.

 

  Cheryl Langdon-Orr (CLO)  ALAC - APRegional Member: (02:20) I agree Kieth

 

  Tatiana Tropina 3: (02:20) Bruce, normally they do but re to what governemnts are going to do. Re corporations and private enforcement of HR frameworks... I am not sure anypne can come with the examples of any real danger re "applicable law"

 

  Jordan Carter: (02:21) go Becky

 

  Tatiana Tropina 3: (02:26) I am still inclined to think that the bylaw language itself with its restrictions solves the problem of claims

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (02:26) Leon, did we take into account comments received from RSSAC AND BEFORE THAT FROM iab to introduce the term " FACILITATE" before " coordinate7 Coordination 2 in the ICANN Mission?

 

  Gary Hunt - UK Government: (02:27)  We would like to ensure any amendments to the mission do not inadvertently remove its obligations with regards to Public Interest Commitments...

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (02:28) Tks Becky

 

  Seun Ojedeji: (02:28) Will be good to have the current mission text sent to the list to have overall idea of what it now look like. Thanks Becky.

 

  Becky Burr: (02:28) Yes Gary, we understand.  That concern continues to be a point of discussion with respect, especially, to grandfathering language.

 

  jorge cancio (GAC Switzerland): (02:29) +1 Gary

 

  Gary Hunt - UK Government: (02:29) Thanks Becky!

 

  Keith Drazek: (02:29) Making ICANN a consumer protection/trust agency for the DNS would be a substantial expansion of ICANN's mission and scope of responsibilities. The AoC was explicit about the need for a Review Team to assess the New gTLD program and the marketplace expansion associated it, but that was a very  appropriately targeted mandate.

 

  Bernard Turcotte Staff Support: (02:29) @Seun - best reference is the slide deck from Thursday call last week

 

  Andrew Sullivan: (02:29) I observe that the IAB's comment on this draft was that it was comfortable with the revised mission text, subject to whatever final bylaw text comes out

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (02:29) Monday is GAC High Lecvel meeting

 

  Bernard Turcotte Staff Support: (02:30) on Mission of course

 

  Sabine Meyer: (02:30) just wanted to mention the HLM as well.

 

  Sabine Meyer: (02:30) 7 March, for anybody checking their calendars

 

  Jordan Carter: (02:30) avoid clashing the HLM?

 

  Becky Burr: (02:30) @ Andrew, noted

 

  jorge cancio (GAC Switzerland): (02:31) Agree with concerns on 7th of March

 

  Seun Ojedeji: (02:31) Thanks @Bernard

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (02:33) Alan11

 

  jorge cancio (GAC Switzerland): (02:33) Agree with Alan on need of a revised timeline as soon as possible. Otherwise SO/AC will have difficulties in providing feedback

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (02:33) Point taken on Monday HLM clasj

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (02:33) clash

 

  Sabine Meyer: (02:33) That is a bit of a catch-22 for SO/ACs trying to give feedback on a finalized proposal.

 

  jorge cancio (GAC Switzerland): (02:34) is this a chicken-egg problem?

 

  Seun Ojedeji: (02:34) Can we propose a timeline based on the dates SO/AC will provide their feedback

 

  Keith Drazek: (02:34) The GNSO expects to finalize its feedback to the CCWG on the 14th...this Thursday. 

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (02:34) @Seun : it depends also on the extent of concerns raised

 

  jorge cancio (GAC Switzerland): (02:34) at Keith: will the GNSO issue a final feedback?

 

  Keith Drazek: (02:34) Finalized feedback on the current draft, that is. Not necessarily final approval of a future revised proposal.

 

  Seun Ojedeji: (02:35) @Mathieu, makes sense. Thanks

 

  Greg Shatan: (02:35) Sabine, I think at this point the SOACs can only provide feedback on the Third Draft.  That is the approach the GNSO is taking.  Anything else is a moving target.

 

  Sabine Meyer: (02:35) Thank you, Greg and Keith.

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (02:35) Tks Leon

 

  Greg Shatan: (02:35) @Alan, thaks for trying.

 

  jorge cancio (GAC Switzerland): (02:35) thanks, Keith - that is the logical problem: until there is a final CCWG doc on the table SO/AC cannot give a final feedback, right?

 

  Mathieu Weill, ccNSO, co-chair: (02:35) But can provide feedback on 3rd repport.

 

  Markus Kummer: (02:36) Bye all

 

  Brett Schaefer: (02:36) good night all

 

  Keith Drazek: (02:36) @Jorge: The GNSO will provide initial feedback and guidance on the current draft. Final approval will be subject to the supplemental report.

 

  Jordan Carter: (02:36) bye all

 

  Cheryl Langdon-Orr (CLO)  ALAC - APRegional Member: (02:36) Good progress Thanks everyone talk again soon... bye for now...

 

  Pär Brumark (GAC Niue): (02:36) Thx all!

 

  Bernard Turcotte Staff Support: (02:36) bye all

 

  Seun Ojedeji: (02:36) Thanks Bye

 

  David McAuley (RySG): (02:36) Thanks all, early end

 

  Aarti Bhavana: (02:36) Bye all

 

  Athina Fragkouli (ASO): (02:36) bye all

 

  Kavouss Arasteh: (02:36) Yes .It was good cakll, Tks for co-chairs and  astaff

 

  Asha Hemrajani: (02:36) Thank you

 

  Steve Crocker: (02:36) Thanks, everyone.

 

  Gary Hunt - UK Government: (02:36) Good bye from London!

 

  Avri Doria: (02:36) bye

 

  Tatiana Tropina 3: (02:36) bye everyone!

 

  Greg Shatan: (02:36) Good night!

 

  Matthew Shears: (02:36) thanks