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ICANN Accra Meeting Topic: Draft Final Report
of the .info Country Names Discussion Group
Posted: 21 February 2002
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Annex I
Names Council resolution on the reservation of geographical and geopolitical
names
11 October 2001
Whereas,
in a communiqué made by the Government Advisory Council (GAC)
at its Montevideo meeting http://www.icann.org/committees/gac/communique-09sep01.htm
"the GAC recommends that the names of countries and distinct economies,
particularly those contained in the ISO 3166-1 standard, as applied
by ICANN in identifying ccTLDs, should be reserved by the .info Registry,
(or if registered in the Sunrise Period challenged by the Registry and,
if successful, then reserved) in Latin characters in their official
language(s) and in English and assigned to the corresponding governments
and public authorities, at their request, for use. These names in other
IDN character sets should be reserved in the same way as soon as they
become available."
Whereas,
in the same communiqué the GAC further "draws the attention
of ICANN and the Registries to the fact that a large number of other
names, including administrative sub-divisions of countries and distinct
economies as recognised in international fora, may give rise to contested
registrations. Accordingly the GAC recommends that Registrars and eventual
Registrants should be made aware of this".
Whereas,
the ICANN Board in reaction to this communiqué has initiated
an action plan http://www.icann.org/montevideo/action-plan-country-names-09oct01.htm
and that following a request from ICANN, Afilias, the dot info registry,
has in September 2001 reserved around 130
ISO 3166-1 standard names and their equivalents in official languages.
Whereas,
in this action plan the Board will establish a discussion group comprising
Board and GAC members on the ISO 3166-1 names and has called upon the
DNSO to consider the longer-term issue of other geographical identifiers,
Whereas,
the recent report from WIPO The Recognition of Rights and the Use
of Names in the Internet Domain Name System http://wipo2.wipo.int/process2/report
(WIPO-2) concludes:
"For geographical identifiers,
it is recognized
that certain norms exist at the international level which prohibit false
and deceptive indications of geographical source on goods and which
protect geographical indications, or the names of geographical localities
with which goods having particular characteristics derived from that
locality are associated. However, these rules apply to trade in goods
and may require some adaptation to deal with the perceived range of
problems with the misuse of geographical indications in the DNS. Furthermore,
the lack of an international agreed list of geographical indications
would pose significant problems for the application of the UDRP in this
area because of the need to make difficult choices of applicable law.
It is suggested that the international framework in this area needs
to be further advanced before an adequate solution is available to the
misuse of geographical indications in the DNS. As far as other geographical
terms are concerned, the Report produces considerable evidence of the
widespread registration of the names of countries, places within countries
and indigenous peoples as domain names by persons unassociated with
the countries, places or peoples. However, these areas are not covered
by existing international laws and a decision needs to be taken as to
whether such laws ought to be developed".
Whereas,
the WIPO report shows that seeking to extend coverage to anything narrower
that the ISO 3166 country list is fraught with problems some of which
have occupied the WTO and other fora for years due to conflicts arising:
between geo-political indicators e.g. Venice Italy, Venice CA; Los Angeles
California USA, Los Angeles Panama City Panama.
- between geographical indicators and descriptors e.g. Chablis (French
wine region and Chablis-style wines from California).
- between geographical indications and trademarks e.g. Torres (a Portuguese
village that grows vines and Torres, a Spanish winemaker),
- between geo-political and geographic indications of origin e.g.
Parma the town and Parma ham.
Whereas,
the further work recommended in the WIPO-2 report has already been scheduled
in two upcoming sessions of the WIPO Standing Committee on the Law of
Trademarks, Industrial Designs and Geographical Indications, with the
deadline of reporting to the WIPO General Assembly for consideration
before September, 2002.
Whereas,
the recent expansion of top-level domain names by ICANN has been a limited
rather cautious test and included the names dot biz, dot name and dot
info as well as chartered domain names, and that the implication of
this expansion is that there are more to come in the near future.
Whereas,
the dot info registry has adopted the UDRP to enable the return of names
acquired in bad faith.
Whereas,
the ICANN Board has approved initiatives relating to Multilingual Domain
Names and these initiatives have yet to complete their work,
The Names Council advises:
1. That while it understands the concerns of the GAC, caution should
be exercised to avoid a short-term reaction to a problem that is not
inherent to dot info.
2. That there is not a full understanding of the implications for suppliers
and users of retrospective action of the kind GAC seeks.
3. That, due to the inherent complexity, the best forum for governments
to seek solutions to the problems perceived by the GAC is the existing
forum of such intellectual property expertise, namely the inter-governmental
specialised UN agency, the World Intellectual Property Organisation
(WIPO) combined with the existing forum for representing the internet
community in policy making, the DNSO, and other relevant stakeholders.
4. That any technical reasons for the reservation of the two-letter
country codes in ISO 3166-1 do not extend to country names.
The Names Council therefore calls upon the ICANN Board:
a) to recommend to the GAC that it reconsiders its recommendation in
this matter in the light of the work already in progress at WIPO following
the recent WIPO report The Recognition of Rights and the Use of Names
in the Internet Domain Name System, and,
b) to encourage the GAC and all interested parts of the ICANN structure
to contribute to WIPO's work in this respect.
c) to invite the Names Council to participate in the discussion group
on ISO 3166-1 names.
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21-Feb-2002
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The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers. All rights
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