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General
Counsel's Analysis of .aero Sponsored TLD Agreement
24 November 2001
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Analysis
of .aero Sponsored TLD Agreement
To the Board:
Procedural
Background
On 20 November 2001, I advised
you that negotiation of the sixth "New TLD Agreement", with
SITA as sponsor of .aero, had been completed and that the proposed agreement
and all attachments had been posted on the ICANN web site. This notification
brings into play the "last call" procedure for the .aero and
.coop agreements established by the Board's
resolutions in Montevideo. Those resolutions provided, in relevant
part:
Resolved [01.83] that
the President and General Counsel are authorized and requested to
complete negotiation of the .aero and .coop agreements (including
attachments) as soon as feasible and to post the attachments on the
ICANN web site;
Resolved [01.84] that
the Board shall be notified of the complete posting of the agreement
and appendices for each of .aero and .coop and after that notification
seven days shall be allowed for Board members to make any additional
comments to the President and General Counsel; [and]
Resolved [01.85] that
in the absence of the request of any Board member to the contrary
based on policy considerations, the President is authorized to sign
the posted agreements for .aero and .coop after the conclusion of
those seven days[.]
My 20 November 2001 notification
therefore set in motion a seven-day period, ending on 27 November 2001,
to afford Board members a last opportunity to ensure that the negotiated
documents are consistent with the Board's selection of the .aero TLDs
and its guidance concerning the new TLD agreements. In the event that
a Board member requests, based on policy considerations, that the .aero
agreement not be signed, then the matter will be scheduled for a future
Board meeting for consideration of the request by the Board. (I previously
gave the Board a notification for .coop on 6 November 2001. No "contrary
request" was received by 13 November 2001 and that agreement has
now been signed.)
Comments
by Edward Hasbrouck
In e-mail messages dated
16 November
2001 and 21
November 2001, Edward Hasbrouck requested that the .aero Sponsored
TLD Agreement not be signed. Instead, Mr. Hasbrouck urges that the Board
schedule a public forum on the .aero Sponsored TLD Agreement "at
your next (Accra) or a subsequent meeting."
Mr. Hasbrouck's comments
appear to raise one substantive concernover the specific scope
of the .aero charterand a variety of procedural complaints. They
are analyzed below.
Substantive
Complaints
In his 16
November comment, Mr. Hasbrouck objected to the scope of the .aero
charter. His substantive complaints to the charter are (a) that it is
(he asserts) inconsistent with the scope of the proposal made by SITA
last year and selected by the Board at its 16 November 2000 meeting
and (b) that it fails " to represent the diversity of the sponsored
gTLD community and its stakeholders, including failing to allow for
registration by many members of the originally-defined community or
to provide for at- large participation in the governance or administration
of the .aero domain."
After reviewing the original
SITA proposal, it is my conclusion that Mr. Hasbrouck's complaints about
the charter are not persuasive.
Nature
of Sponsored TLDs
In assessing the appropriateness
of the .aero charter, it is helpful to first review some basic concepts
underlying sponsored TLDs. A sponsored TLD is one that is established
to serve a community of limited scope. As explained
in the 13 June 2000 staff-prepared topic paper, which formed the
basis for the Board's decision in Yokohama to go ahead with introduction
of a first round of new TLDs, sTLDs are intended to be vehicles for
ICANN to delegate policy-formulation functions for special-purpose TLDs
to organizations that can more easily focus on the needs of the stakeholders
most directly involved with those TLDs:
D. Delegation of policy-formulation
requirements for special-purpose TLDs.
As envisioned by the White
Paper, ICANN is responsible for overall coordination of the DNS. In
view of the hierarchical nature of the DNS, however, the responsibility
for establishment of policies within TLDs varies depending on the
nature of the TLD. Policies for fully open TLDs (such as .com, .net,
and .org) are formulated through the ICANN process, which involves
participation of all segments of the global Internet community. Policies
for other TLDs (such as .edu and the ccTLDs), on the other hand, have
been formulated by focused constituencies.
Proponents of limited-purpose
TLDs have advocated a "sponsorship" paradigm, in which policy-formulation
responsibility for the TLD would be delegated to an organization that
allows participation of the affected segments of the relevant communities.
The sponsoring organization would have authority to make decisions
regarding policies applicable to the TLD, provided they are within
the scope of the TLD's charter and comport with requirements concerning
interoperability, availability of registration data, and the like
intended to ensure that the interests of the overall Internet are
served. For example, the TLD .museum might be sponsored by an association
of museums and the .union TLD might be sponsored by a group of labor
unions. In many respects, the sponsorship paradigm is a generalization
of the concepts underlying appointment of managers for ccTLDs under
existing ccTLD delegation policy.
Consistent with the Board's
authorization in Yokohama, the application program for new TLDs made
arrangements for "unsponsored" and "sponsored" TLDs.
Commercial organizations would apply to operate uTLDs (such as .biz
and .info) while "sponsoring organizations" would apply to
assume the sponsorship of sTLDs. As described
in the 3 August 2000 New TLD Application Process Overview (based
on which the new TLD proposals were submitted), a "sponsoring organization"
is:
An organization to which
ICANN delegates some defined level of ongoing policy-formulation responsibility
regarding the manner in which a particular TLD is operated, provided
the policies are within the scope of the TLD's charter and comply
with requirements concerning interoperability, availability of registration
data, and the like intended to ensure that the interests of the overall
Internet are served. In TLDs which have a sponsoring organization,
that organization is primarily responsible for choosing the registry
operator (see below).
The extent to which certain
policy-formulation responsibilities are appropriately delegated to
a sponsoring organization will depend upon the characteristics of
the organization that may make such delegation appropriate. These
characteristics may include the mechanisms the organization proposes
to use to formulate policies, its mission, who will be permitted to
participate and in what way, and the degree and type of accountability
to the community it will serve (to the extent these are necessary
and appropriate). The Sponsoring Organization's Proposal provides
an opportunity to provide information on these characteristics.
At its 16 November 2000 meeting
in Marina del Rey, after reviewing the characteristics of many applicants
seeking to become sponsoring organizations, the
Board selected three sTLDs, .aero, .coop, and .museum. The Board
authorized the negotiation of "appropriate agreements" with
the sponsors for these sTLDs. Pursuing this direction, we have negotiated
a standard agreement, reflecting the delegation and representation principles
inherent in sTLDs, with all three sponsors.
The standard sTLD agreement
is accompanied by 23 attachments that allow for tailoring the agreement
to accommodate features of the sponsor's proposals in a manner consistent
with the overall design of sTLDs and other ICANN policies. The three
attachments most relevant to Mr. Hasbrouck's objections are:
Attachment
1: The Charter. This attachment defines the purposes for which
the sTLD is established. In particular, it describes the range of
purposes for which the sponsor may choose to register names within
the sponsored TLD. The sponsor may, through exercise of its delegated
authority, further restrict the scope under which the sTLD is operated.
Attachment
2: Delegated Authority. This attachment defines the extent to
which ICANN's policy-formulation responsibilities are delegated to
the sponsor. The four main areas of policy delegation are: (a) naming
conventions and registration restrictions within the sponsored TLD;
(b) selection and oversight of the performance of the registry operator;
(c) selection of registrars; and (d) the terms of dealing among the
registry operator, registrars, and registrants as necessary to give
effect to (a)-(c).
Attachment
5: Description of the Sponsored TLD Community. This is a definition
of the community for which the sTLD is to be operated. Subsection
4.2 of the Sponsored TLD Agreement requires the sponsor to be
representative of, and operate openly and transparently with respect
to, this community. The sponsored TLD community is generally intended
to be either commensurate in scope with or broader than the registrants
within the scope of the charter.
Comparison
of the Original SITA "Sponsored TLD Proposal" with the .aero
Charter
The context described above
facilitates a well-informed comparison of the original SITA proposal
with the .aero charter. Mr. Hasbrouck's comments assert that SITA originally
proposed an sTLD that included both providers and "users or purchasers"
of air transport servicesairlines as well as passengers. He complains
that the charter is narrower, in that it contemplates names will be
registered only to providers of air transport services. He also complains
that the charter does not include others who may be affected by noise
and other aspects of air transport operationssuch as "affected
homeowners, neighborhood organizations, civil liberties organizations,
etc."
Mr. Hasbrouck's characterization
of the .aero charter is mostly correct. The charter's
definition of the purpose of the .aero sTLD is as follows:
The .aero TLD is restricted
to people, entities and government agencies which: (1) provide for
and support the efficient, safe, and secure transport of people and
cargo by air; and (2) facilitate or perform the necessary transactions
to transport people and cargo by air.
(It should be noted that
any suggestion that the .aero TLD will be limited to companies, rather
than individuals, is incorrect. In addition to airlines and other companies
providing air transport services, the charter also covers pilots, mechanics,
air crews, consultants, and other individuals engaged in providing air
transportation.)
Within the scope of the .aero
charter, SITA as the .aero sponsor is delegated responsibility for establishing
naming
conventions and restrictions
on who may register within the .aero sTLD. In the charter, SITA
has set forth a bulleted
list of twenty-five categories of people and entities within the scope
of the charter; the charter provides that SITA may add additional
categories of registrants within the scope of the indented definition
quoted above.
Mr. Hasbrouck's claim that
this "provider only" focus of the .aero sTLD is inconsistent
with the SITA proposal is refuted by the proposal
itself. As required in the application process, SITA submitted a
"Sponsoring
Organization's Proposal" describing SITA's characteristics
and stating why it was an appropriate organization to sponsor the proposed
TLD. (Like the other parts of its application, this document was posted
for public comment on ICANN's web site prior to the Board's selections.)
In this document, SITA discussed the community that it sought to represent
as follows (in what follows, text from SITA's proposal appears in magenta;
passages copied from the ICANN-prepared application form are in green;
boldface type is added to emphasize relevant portions):
(ICANN:)
C5. Appropriateness of Community. If the organization is intended
to serve or represent a particular community, define the community
and explain why that definition fits the TLD proposal.
(SITA:) The
Air Transport Community is the driving force behind the travel and
tourism industry, the fastest growing sector and largest employer
in the world today. It encompasses all of those companies and organizations
that make up aviation, including airlines and airports,
as well the regulators of the industry, the civil aviation
organizations, working together at an intergovernmental level
in ICAO. It comprises the aerospace industry, including the
major manufacturers, and other suppliers to the industry.
Among these are the computer reservation systems linking airlines
and other suppliers with the travel agents that have direct contact
with the consumers.
Interaction
between each of these companiesairlines, manufacturers and airports,
etc.is extremely complex. They have to address a number of often
competing concerns daily, and have the lives of others to consider
as a primary issue at all times. It is a community that requires stability,
secure and reliable access to information and certainty in locating
that information. There is and will continue to be a need for considerable
sharing of information from a steady platform. The need for consistent
standards and common delivery platforms will be just as great for
Internet based systems.
An example
may illustrate this point. A passenger travelling on a journey involving
more than one airline, or even a change of aircraft, will require
consistent and accurate information to be accessible to check-in,
baggage, catering, aircraft loading, refueling, flight planning and
customer service staff. In a normal journey, this may involve staff
of at least three different companies. There is a need for all of
these groups to access information. The Internet will increasingly
be the platform from which this information is accessed, subject to
there being consistency and reliability in its display, and security
in its storage. A domain for the Air Transport Community will give
the industry the basis from which to work co-operatively, as it has
done in the past, to develop new generation systems.
SITA elaborated on this provider-only
purpose of the .aero TLD in its "Description
of TLD Policies," which was posted for public comment. That
document begins with a description of "General
TLD Policies", as follows :
(SITA:) This
proposes the adoption of a Top Level Domain for the entire Air Transport
Community (ATC), ".air". In this Description of TLD Policies
proposal, the definition of ATC is: "All companies and organizations
for which the main activity is related to Air Transport."
The ATC
includes airlines, aerospace companies, airport authorities and governmental
organizations. This TLD will provide a clear and relevant presence
and access for air transportation in cyberspace.
The policies
that already exist for the airline industry will be applied. These
policies have been used for 50 years and have stood the challenge
of technology evolution, and time. . . .
The section
of the SITA Proposal on "REGISTRATION RESTRICTIONS" then
described the provider-only focus of the proposal in detail:
(ICANN:)
III. REGISTRATION RESTRICTIONS (Required for restricted TLDs only)
E16. As
noted in the New TLD Application Process Overview, a restricted TLD
is one with enforced restrictions on (1) who may apply for a registration
within the domain, (2) what uses may be made of those registrations,
or (3) both. In this section, please describe in detail the restrictions
you propose to apply to the TLD. Your description should should define
the criteria to be employed, the manner in which you propose they
be enforced, and the consequences of violation of the restrictions.
Examples of matters that should be addressed are:
(SITA:) The
intention of the ".air" is to provide a service to the air
transport industry and registrants are restricted to legitimate members
of the industry.
For example,
IBERIA.air will legitimize the Spanish airline in the corresponding
air transportation cyberspace to perform business.
In Spain
there other companies that have the same name. IBERIA (travel agency)
and IBERIA (Insurance company). In such case, IBERIA.air is clear
and allows to position IBERIA airlines in the sector.
(ICANN:)E17.
Describe in detail the criteria for registration in the TLD. Provide
a full explanation of the reasoning behind the specific policies chosen.
(SITA:) The
".air" name is a restricted TLD for the air transportation
industry sector. A limited number of exceptions will be constituted
for those names that are unknown to the current IATA, ICAO, ACI codes
and branding names. The exception names will need to be approved by
the Air Name Policy Group.
The Registry
will maintain a list of contact persons for each registrant. When
a name is requested for registration the corresponding contact points
will be advised of the request in order to minimize future dispute
problems.
After an
initial phase of operation further registrants may be considered if
the industry bodies believe that their inclusion is in the best interests
of the community.
(ICANN:)E18.
Describe the application process for potential registrants in the
TLD.
(SITA:)
Registrants wishing to register names will be registered after the
evaluation process. At the same time we will register a set of standard
third level names which will be proposed or coordinated allowing the
standardization of names in the ".air". The purpose of standard
names is to facilitate the communications among industry participants,
particularly at the host system level. These names are covered in
IATA recommended practice 789 and will be updated through the standard
committee working groups.
Where appropriate,
the registrants will be required to produce evidence that the name
is a legal entity.
For the
registrars joining after the initial group of ATC registrars, a set
of procedures will be explicitly defined.
(ICANN:)
E19. Describe the enforcement procedures and mechanisms for ensuring
registrants meet the registration requirements.
(SITA:) Registrants
already comply with IATA, ICAO, and ACI procedures. The current enforcement
process will continue. If registrants do not comply with these requirements
they will not be granted a ".air" name.
(ICANN:)E20.
Describe any appeal process from denial of registration.
(SITA:) The
current industry appeals process will continue to apply. Where the
issues fall outside those encountered in past airline activity, ICANN
procedures will apply (standards procedures for appeal could be submitted
to the ANPG).
(ICANN:)E21.
Describe any procedure that permits third parties to seek cancellation
of a TLD registration for failure to comply with restrictions.
(SITA:) The
current industry processes for appeal will apply.
In view of these many statements
that the .aero TLD was proposed to be used by those engaged in providing
air transportation and related support services, there appears to be
no basis in fact for Mr. Hasbrouck's claim that the .aero charter is
inconsistent with SITA's proposal that was selected by the Board in
November 2000.
"Content
Neutrality"
Mr. Hasbrouck's comments
also assert that the .aero charter violates what he refers to a principle
of "content neutrality". He asserts that the charter would
allow only "boosters" of the air transport industry, but not
its critics, to register within .aero. His assertion rests on a strained
interpretation of the term "support" used in the charter.
As stated in the charter,
the .aero TLD is established for use by those that directly provide
air transport services (airlines and pilots) and those that provide
necessary support services (airplane manufacturers, air traffic control,
mechanics, etc.):
The .aero TLD is restricted
to people, entities and government agencies which: (1) provide for
and support the efficient, safe, and secure transport of people and
cargo by air; and (2) facilitate or perform the necessary transactions
to transport people and cargo by air.
The suggestion that the term
"support" in the above passage is used as a means of "content"
control is not persuasive. (It should be noted that one bulleted item
in the .aero charter allows registration by "aviation media".)
Objection
to SITA
In his 16
November message, Mr. Hasbrouck asserts that SITA is an inappropriate
representative of the sponsored TLD community for .aero because "SITA
has failed to represent the diversity of the community as it was represented
in the SITA proposal for .aero, excluding significant segments of the
community (particularly users and purchasers of air transport services,
and those critical of air transport)." This assertion is based
on incorrect assumptions about the scope of the .aero community as proposed
and selected by the Board in November 2000. SITA's background indicates
that it is well-situated to represent the providers of air transport
services for which the TLD was originally proposed.
Procedural
Objections
Mr. Hasbrouck's comments
also raise a variety of procedural objections to the .aero Sponsored
TLD Agreement. These objections do not appear to be well-founded:
1. He asserts that because
the agreement was negotiated by a "closed procedure", it
violates the principles of openness and transparency on which ICANN
is based. This complaint is based on mistaken notions of what the
openness and transparency principles require. Those principles apply
to ICANN's establishment of policies, not the drafting of contracts.
What is important is that ICANN's policies are open for public review,
comment, and participation before they are established, not that the
actual drafting process, whether for contracts or even policies, be
done in public. Indeed, it is difficult to imagine how well-crafted
legal documents could be prepared without providing the drafters the
solitude to carefully consider the consequences of the words they
employ. Openness and transparency do not require that documents be
subject to public view at every stage of their development; it is
sufficient that the policies embodied in those documents be open to
public scrutiny and comment.
In fact, the Sponsored
TLD Agreement was opened for a full opportunity for public review
and comment, though little comment was actually received. The Sponsored
TLD Agreement was originally posted on the ICANN web site on 20
August 2001, with minor revisions being made and posted on 29
August, 13
October, and 16
October 2001. Throughout this period, a
web-based forum on the New TLD Agreements was maintained. A
topic paper on the Sponsored TLD Agreements was posted on 5 September
2001 to prompt discussion at the Montevideo meeting. An in-person
public comment period was held on 9 September 2001 in Montevideo.
Although the comments received were few in number, a full opportunity
was presented to comment on the standard agreement.
At the time of the Montevideo
meeting, many of the attachments for the .aero agreement were not
yet completed and had therefore not been posted. These documents were
posted as soon as they were completed, with the .aero
charter being posted originally on 9 November 2001 (a revision
not relevant to this discussion was posted on 20 November 2001) and
the Definition
of the Sponsored TLD Community being posted also on 9 November 2001.
These documents do not themselves create any new "policy";
instead they are intended to implement in legal language the scope
of the .aero TLD that was selected by the ICANN Board, after very
extensive public discussion, in November 2000. The only issue at this
point should be whether or not the documents faithfully reflect the
proposal selected a year ago and other established ICANN policies.
Mr. Hasbrouck has taken the opportunity to comment on that issue;
for the reasons described above his objections are not persuasive.
2. Mr. Hasbrouck objects
that the delegation of authority to sponsors of sTLDs violates ICANN's
bylaws because the sponsors operate under different procedures than
ICANN. Delegation of policy-development responsibility to a TLD sponsor
is, of course, a longstanding feature of the domain-name system. In
fact, the IANA long ago created ccTLDs and delegated them to trustees
for the various countries. This delegation was based on the policy
determination that the DNS would be most useful if TLDs were established
for specialized communities and delegated to those that could serve
those communities through focused representation. As described above,
the ccTLD model was the basis on which the decision to establish sponsored
TLDs was made. Just as ccTLD managers are not required to follow procedures
identical to ICANN's, there is no reason to impose such a requirement
on sTLD sponsors.
In fact, the Sponsored
TLD Agreement requires that SITA, like all sponsors, operate in an
open and transparent way, providing a forum for the sponsored TLD
community to develop policies for the sTLD. Subsection
4.2 of the agreement requires the sponsor, when exercising its
delegated authority, to:
4.2.1. publish [its]
standards, policies, procedures, and practices so they are available
to members of the Sponsored TLD Community;
4.2.2. conduct its policy-development
activities in manner that reasonably provides opportunities for
members of the Sponsored TLD Community to discuss and participate
in the development of such standards, policies, procedures, or practices;
4.2.3. maintain the representativeness
of its policy-development and implementation process by establishing
procedures that facilitate participation by a broad cross-section
of the Sponsored TLD Community;
4.2.4. ensure, through
published procedures, adequate opportunities for members of the
Sponsored TLD Community to submit their views on and objections
to the establishment or revision of standards, policies, procedures,
and practices or the manner in which standards, policies, procedures,
and practices are enforced;
4.2.5. ensure that any
revenues received by Sponsor or any affiliated entity directly or
indirectly from the provision of Registry Services are used solely
for the benefit of the Sponsored TLD Community; and
4.2.6. ensure that any
contract with a Registry Operator precludes any control by that
Registry Operator over the policy-development process of the Sponsored
TLD.
These contractual provisions
provide safeguards against a sponsor's inappropriate use of the delegated
authority.
3. In his comments, Mr.
Hasbrouck complains that not all of the information in SITA's
reports to ICANN will be made immediately available to the public.
In fact, however, the vast majority of the information provided in
those reports (70 of 77 items to be reported) will either be immediately
subject to public disclosure or may be released after only three months.
Of the 77 items of information to be reported, only one (involving
breakdowns of marketing and capital expenditures) will be confidential
for eighteen months and six items will be confidential for six months.
All of the information reported by SITA will be ultimately available
to the public. The benefits of obtaining commercially sensitive information
at an early stage, so that the "proof of concept" can be
fully evaluated based on solid data, are readily apparent.
Conclusion
On careful analysis, the
objections to the .aero Sponsored TLD Agreement raised by Mr. Hasbrouck
are not well founded. The agreement is faithful to the SITA proposal
selected by the Board in November 2000 and is consistent with ICANN
policies. It was negotiated following a process authorized by the Board
and consistent with the ICANN bylaws.
Respectfully submitted,
Louis Touton
General Counsel
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