Whois Workshop
A workshop on Whois issues was held in two sessions of the Public
Forum in Montréal. The first session was held from 08:00
to 12:00 on Tuesday, 24 June 2003; the second session was held
from 08:00 to 12:00 on Wednesday,
25 June 2003. The document below provides information on the agenda
for the workshop.
Index
Whois Workshop Agenda
Tuesday, 24 June 2003
Wednesday, 25 June 2003
Speaker Biographies
Background Materials (links
to another document)
Whois Workshop Agenda
The Whois workshop is intended to initiate a period of discussion within
the ICANN community on Whois and related privacy and other issues. The
workshop is being held in response to a request from the GNSO Council,
and in cooperation with the GAC's work program.
The workshop will take place on Tuesday and Wednesday mornings of the
ICANN meeting from 08:00 to 12:00 each day. Webcasting and scribing will
be provided. A web archive of presentation materials will be available
in advance of the workshop.
Tuesday, 24 June 2003
The Tuesday workshop session will consist of a series of ten short tutorial-style
presentations dealing with current Whois policy and practice. The presentations
will be followed by a public comment and question/answer session for purposes
of clarifying questions and comments. The panelists have been requested
to make their presentations brief so as to accommodate the maximum amount
of information on Tuesday morning.
The intent of these presentations is to provide factual information on
Whois as it exists today. Broadly, this means:
- An overview of what the Whois database is, including a brief technical
summary.
- A summary of ICANN contract requirements and policies surrounding
Whois.
- A summary of Whois or Internet related privacy rules and policies
of various jurisdictions.
- ICANN's experience with Whois complaints, from users, consumers, providers,
and registrants.
- The practical experience in providing Whois, how it is used and the
issues or concerns faced by the panelists:
- Registries and Registrars (both gTLD and ccTLD)
- Business users
- ISPs
- IP interests
- Consumers and Registrants
- Other privacy interests
(such as free speech advocates)
- Law enforcement
Tuesday Presentations
08:00 - Opening Remarks (Paul Twomey, ICANN CEO)
08:05 - Presentations
1 - Overview of current policy
and contractual obligations, etc. (Louis Touton, ICANN)
2 - Review of IETF work on Whois specification (Andrew Newton, VeriSign)
3 - Review of Whois for non-name uses (Ray Plzak, American Registry for Internet Numbers)
4 - Overview of registry-registrar relationships/differences across all TLDs (Bruce Beckwith, Public Interest
Registry)
5 - gTLD registrar uses of Whois (Bruce Tonkin, Melbourne IT)
09:30 - Morning Break
09:45 - Presentations Continued
6 - Privacy & data protection considerations in using Whois (Diana Alonso Blas, European Commission, DG Internal Market, Media and Data
Protection)
7 - ccTLD registry/registrar uses of Whois (Bart Boswinkel - .nl)
8 - Intellectual Property Rights uses of Whois (Jane Mutimear, Intellectual
Property Interests constituency)
9 - Consumer-protection uses of Whois (Michael Donohue, Organization
for Economic Co-operation and Development)
10 - Law-enforcement uses of Whois (Maneesha Mithal, United States
Federal Trade Commission)
11:30 - Public Comment Period
12:00 - Close
Wednesday, 25 June 2003
08:00 - Opening Remarks (Sharil Tarmizi, GAC Chair)
08:05 - Panel 1: Balancing Public Policy Issues in the Current
Whois System
Issues for Discussion:
- Is the current Whois system working?
- Can those who use Whois data obtain the information they need from
other sources?
- Can those who collect and publish Whois data balance the local law
requirements against Whois requirements?
- Can the privacy concerns be resolved by use of third party registration
services? What are the implications of such services for people who
need access to Whois data?
- Can the concerns regarding the existing Whois database be overcome
by increased enforcement of requirements in RAA? Does ICANN have the
ability to properly police the RAA to the extent necessary to protect
all parties' interests? How can such enforcement be facilitated?
- Can the concerns regarding the existing Whois system be addressed
by modifications of the RAA? Who should decide what modifications
are necessary to balance privacy concerns against the competing public
policy concern of accountability?
- Should there be modified rules for "non-commercial" domain
names to protect privacy while providing contact data on commercial
domain names? Does that approach address all interested parties' needs?
Could a special domain be created for non-commercial domain names
that would have different Whois rules? How would one define commercial
versus non-commercial?
Moderator:
- George Papapavlou (EU), GAC Whois Working Group Member
Discussants:
- Antenor Correa (Brasil), GAC Representative
- Alan Wong (Hong Kong), GAC Representative
Panelists:
- Registrar: Thomas Keller, Schlund + Partner AG
- Registry: Jeff Neuman, NeuStar
- Privacy Advocate: Diana Alonso Blas, European Commission,
DG Internal Market, Media and Data Protection
- ISP: Sarah Deutsch, Verizon
- IPR: Christian Wichard, World Intellectual Property Organization
- Consumer Interests: Michael Donohue, Organization for Economic
Co-operation and Development
- Third-Party Registration Provider: Paul Stahura, eNom
- Law Enforcement: John LoGalbo, United States Department of
Justice
09:20 - Transition to Panel 2
09:30 - Panel 2: New Approaches to Whois Policy and Practice
Issues for Discussion:
- Should there be tiered access to all Whois databases? Does this
approach balance all interested parties' needs? What types of information
would be available in the various tiers and to whom would each tier
be available?
- Could tiered access be administered by a commercial entity in contract
with the registries and with ICANN?
- Should there be tiered access in only a few TLDs - those with non-commercial
domains? Who would police the charters to keep the commercial domains
out?
- Should there be government administration of the entire Whois database?
Should there be government administration of all commercial gTLDs?
Should there be government administration of a new TLD for non-commercial
registrations to ensure privacy?
- Should there be government standards for data collection or civil/criminal
penalties for non-compliance? How would such provisions be enforced
globally?
- Should there be new gTLDs offered with stricter vetting of registrants
(like .PRO or .EDU) in exchange for higher levels of privacy protection
for Whois information? If so, who should administer these new gTLDs?
- Should there be notification to registrants when their data is requested?
If so, when and how much information should be provided to them?
Moderator:
- Robin Layton (US), GAC Whois Working Group Member
Discussants:
- Tom Dale (Australia), GAC Representative
- Pablo Hinojosa (Mexico), GAC Representative
Panelists:
- Registrar: Ross Rader, Tucows
- Registry: Willie Black, Nominet
- Privacy Advocate: Alan Davidson, Center for Democracy &
Technology
- ISP: Henning Grote, Deutsche Telekom
- IPR: Steve Metalitz, International Intellectual Property
Alliance
- Consumer & Law Enforcement Interests: Maneesha Mithal,
United States Federal Trade Commission
- Bulk-Access Registration Provider: Margie Milam, MarkMonitor
- Law Enforcement:
- Pat Beardmore, United Kingdom Office of Fair Trading
10:50 - Transition to Public Comment
11:00 - Public Comment Period
12:00 - Closing Remarks (Paul Twomey, ICANN CEO)
Speaker Biographies
- Diana Alonso Blas
Diana is Legal Affairs and Policy Officer at the Data Protection
Unit of Directorate General Internal Market of the European Commission,
in Brussels. This unit is responsible for the monitoring of the
application of the European Data Protection Directive as well as
for the Secretariat of the Article 29 Data Protection Working Party.
She is in charge of issues such as Internet, e-commerce and privacy-enhancing
technologies. Before joining the Commission, Diana has worked at
the Dutch and Belgian Data Protection Authorities and at the Interdisciplinary
Centre for Information Technology of the university of Leuven, always
in the field of European and international data protection.
- Patrick Beardmore
Patrick Beardmore is the Computer Forensics Investigating Officer
for the Office of Fair Trading, UK, which uses WHOIS as a tool for
law enforcement. He is responsible for digital evidence within the
Cartels Investigation branch, and provides the department with advice
and support regarding consumer protection and Internet issues. He
is a member of the LACORS (Local Authorities Co-Ordinators of Regulatory
Services) Focus Group for E-commerce/E-crime and the UK Internet Crime
Forum.
- Willie Black
Willie Black is Executive Chairman and founding director of Nominet
UK, the national Registry for all .uk domain names. Previously Dr.
Black worked toward the development of the not-for-profit Registry
model. Now as Executive Chairman, he is responsible for spearheading
Nominet's strategy and policy development and is actively involved
in the international discussions on the future of the Domain Name
System. Nominet publishes names and addresses on its WHOIS but not
email addresses or telephone/fax numbers; it also allows an opt-out
for non-trading individuals.
- Tom Dale
Tom Dale is the General Manager of Regulatory Policy with the National
Office for the Information Economy (NOIE), an Australian Government
agency. He is also the Australian delegate to the GAC. NOIE is responsible
for all domestic and international domain name policy issues, including
WHOIS, and has policy responsibility for online privacy and e-security.
NOIE liaises closely with the ccTLD administrator for .au –
auDA - on WHOIS issues.
- Alan Davidson
Alan Davidson is Associate Director at the Center for Democracy
and Technology (CDT), a Washington D.C. non profit group working
to promote civil liberties online. He works broadly on policy issues
surrounding Internet privacy, security, and free expression. CDT
has been a long time member of ICANN's Non Commercial Constituency
and was a part of the 2001 NGO and Academic ICANN Study group evaluating
the at large representation system. He has spoken and written about
the privacy concerns raised by WHOIS and the need to find a balanced
ICANN WHOIS policy.
- Sarah Deutsch
Sarah Deutsch is Vice President and Associate General Counsel for
Verizon Communications. Her practice covers legal issues in the area
of global Internet policy, including liability, privacy, intellectual
property policy and Internet jurisdiction. She currently represents
Verizon on a variety of Internet issues ranging from digital rights
management, the Hague Convention, Council of Europe Cybercrime Convention,
Europe’s IPR Enforcement Directive, ICANN, and legal issues
arising from Internet-related legislation and litigation. She has
served as Private Sector Advisor to the U.S. Delegation to the World
Intellectual Property Organization 1996 Conference on the WIPO Copyright
Treaties, and helped negotiate for the passage of the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act.
- Michael Donohue
Michael Donohue is a Consumer Policy Analyst at the Organization
for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), an international
organization helping governments address the economic, social and
governance challenges of a globalised economy. OECD stresses the
necessity for accurate and available WHOIS data in building consumer
trust as well as preventing consumer fraud by aiding law enforcement.
OECD also believes that ccTLDs and gTLDs should be accountable under
ICANN regulations, all contact data for commercial registrants should
be available to the public, and mandatory suspension of domain names
of registrants who supply false information. The OECD's most recent
work on domain name issues discusses the importance of WHOIS data,
and is available at www.oecd.org/sti/consumer-policy.
- Envir Fraser
Envir Fraser is the Senior Manager for E-Business in the Department
of Communications, South Africa. He is the advisor to the GAC representative.
The Department of Communications is responsible for the development
of public policy in the Information and Communications Technology
in South Africa. Internet and electronic commerce issues are the
most recent additions to the responsibilities of the Department.
- Henning Grote
Henning Grote works for Deutsche Telekom AG, Europe's largest telco.
As Deputy Director of DT's Network Information Center, he is responsible
for technology scouting and developing technology strategy in this
area. He represents DT's Registrar in ICANN's gTLD Registrar Constituency
and is DT's delegate to DENIC, Germany's ccTLD Registry Cooperative
and culmination of Germany's ENUM trial. DT's NIC operates a public
WHOIS for the registrar branch, and in other respects DT uses WHOIS
for operational purposes, such as its LIR.
- Pablo Hinojosa
Pablo Hinojosa is the Director of Multilateral Affairs for the Federal
Telcommunications Commission in Mexico (COFETEL). In this position
he is responsible for COFETEL’s participation in international
fora, particularly ICANN, and serves as the representative of Mexico
to the GAC. Additionally he assists the Chair of the Asia-Pacific
Economic Cooperation Telecommunications & Information Working
Group (APEC-TEL) and has authored the project: “Universal Access
of Telecommunications Services in Mexico.”
- Tom Keller
Tom Keller is with Schlund + Partner AG, a large webhosting company
based in Germany. As one of the biggest ICANN Registrars in Europe,
Schlund is directly affected by the conflict of European data protection
laws and ICANN’s contractual obligations for registrars with
regard to WHOIS. He has been involved in the process of building the
registrar from the very beginning, and is responsible for all related
ICANN matters in the company. He has represented Schlund inside the
Registrar Constituency, as well as being a member of DENIC’s
Technical Advisory Committee as well as the European representative
of the Registrar Constituency in the GNSO Council.
- Robin Layton
Robin Layton is the Associate Administrator for the Office of International
Affairs (OIA) of the Commerce Department's National Telecommuications
and Information Administration (NTIA). NTIA formulates and articulates
Administration policies on information and communications technologies
and represents the Department in international and regional telecomminications
policy fora, such as the ITU, CITEL, OECD and APEC. Ms. Layton is
the accredited representative for the United States to ICANN's Governmental
Advisory Committee (GAC) and serves as the convenor of the GAC Working
Group on Whois.
- John LoGalbo
John LoGalbo is a Trial Attorney with the U.S. Department of Justice
Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section (CCIPS). Prior to
joining the Justice Department, Mr. LoGalbo was the Vice President
of Public Policy for PSINet Inc., a global Internet service provider.
CCIPS coordinates international issues arising from computer and intellectual
property crime in numerous regional and multilateral fora on behalf
of the U.S. Department of Justice. CCIPS chairs the Group of Eight
(G 8) Subgroup on High Tech Crime and was active in negotiations of
the Cybercrime Convention at the Council of Europe.
- Steven Metalitz
Steven Metalitz is a partner in the Washington, DC law firm of Smith
& Metalitz LLP. He has served as counsel to the Copyright Coalition
on Domain Names (CCDN) since its establishment in 1999. CCDN consists
of trade associations, organizations of copyright owners, and copyright
industry companies concerned about policy issues in the domain name
system. He is also Senior Vice President of the International Intellectual
Property Alliance (IIPA), and Executive Vice President of the Intellectual
Property Constituency (IPC) of the ICANN Domain Name Supporting Organization.
He was previously President of IPC until November 2002, and was a
participant in the DNSO/GNSO WHOIS Task Force.
- Margie Milam
Margie Milam is the General Counsel of eMarkmonitor, Inc dba Markmonitor,
an ICANN accredited registrar based in Boise, Idaho. MarkMonitor is
a provider of corporate domain registration and brand protection services
for corporations and law firms. Through a Strategic Alliance with
LexisNexis, MarkMonitor offers a suite of value-added services that
utilize WHOIS information in connection with the monitoring of the
Internet for intellectual property and law enforcement purposes.
- Maneesha Mithal
Maneesha Mithal is Assistant Director for the Federal Trade Commission’s
International Division of Consumer Protection. Her expertise includes
Internet fraud, the WHOIS database, Internet jurisdiction, and alternative
dispute resolution for online consumer transactions. She has served
on the U.S. delegations of the OECD Committee on Consumer Policy,
the OECD Information, Communications, and Computer Policy Committee,
the APEC Electronic Commerce Steering Group, and the Hague Conference
on Private International Law. The FTC is especially concerned in consumer
protection, privacy, and law enforcement issues. The FTC testified
before the U.S. Congress in May 2002 and stressed the need to improve
the accuracy of the WHOIS database so fraudsters can quickly be identified
and prosecuted, while still carefully considering privacy interests.
The FTC’s testimony is available at http://www.ftc.gov/os/2002/05/whois.htm
- Jane Mutimear
Jane is a partner in the London office of international law firm
Bird & Bird. She specialises in intellectual property litigation
and advice, with a particular focus on trade marks and passing off,
but also including patents, copyright and design rights. Her client
base stretches from large multinationals to small e-commerce start-ups.
Jane has spoken and written on a wide range of intellectual property
issues, including internet related issues. Jane is a member of AIPPI
(International Association for the Protection of Intellectual Property),
INTA (International Trade Mark Association), PTMG (Pharmaceutical
Trade Marks Group), TIPLO (The Intellectual Property Lawyers Organisation)
and an associate member of ITMA (Institute of Trade Mark Attorneys)
- Jeff Neuman
Jeff Neuman is the Director of Law and Policy at NeuStar, Inc. He
is responsible for the oversight of intellectual property law and
policy matters, information technology licensing, and is the external
liaison for both NeuStar and NeuLevel, Inc. with ICANN, the Generic
Names Supporting Organization, as well as the country code names supporting
organization. He is also the current Chairperson for the gTLD Registries
Constituency of ICANN and a representative from the gTLD Registries
Constituency of the Generic Names Supporting Organization Council.
He has testified before the Subcommittee on Courts, the Internet and
Intellectual Property of the Committee on the Judiciary, and the U.S.
House of Representatives Oversight committee regarding "ICANN,
New gTLDs and the Protection of Intellectual Property."
- Andrew Newton
Andrew Newton is a research engineer for VeriSign Naming and Directory
Services. Andrew was the principal engineer for VeriSign's Referral
LDAP Service (an experimental LDAP-based prototype for providing
whois services), and has been working on issues surrounding whois
and directory services protocols for VeriSign for over 6 years.
He is an active member of the CRISP working group and other IETF
activities
- George Papapavlou
George Papapavlou is head of the unit ‘Internet-related services’
in the European Commission. His current responsibilities include Internet
naming and addressing and cybercrime, but he has also been involved
in the European intellectual property and personal data protection
initiatives. His work has involved being co-author of the Directive
on the protection of personal data (1995), the Communication on illegal
and harmful content on the Internet (1996), the Regulation on a .eu
Top Level Domain Name (Apr 2002), and the Communication on Computer
Crime (Jan 2001). Additionally he authored the Green Paper on public
sector information (Jan 1999) and the Framework Decision on Attacks
Against Information Systems (Jan 2002).
- Ross Rader
Ross Rader is the Director of Innovation and Research for Tucows
Inc., an ICANN accredited registrar and leading distributor of digital
products and services to Internet Services Providers. Ross is also
Tucows policy delegate to ICANN and represents the company within
the GNSO. Tucows considers WHOIS to be a valuable resource that must
continue to be offered in a manner that balances the needs of all
relevant stakeholders.
- Paul Stahura
Paul Stahura is the founder and CEO of eNom, Inc. eNom became ICANN
accredited just after the initial five "test-bed" registrars
and is now the registrar-of-record of over 2 million domain names,
making it one of the top five largest registrars. eNom maintains a
"reseller" business model and has established a network
of over 5,000 resellers, some of whom have independently initiated
3rd-party WHOIS proxy services. eNom itself has such a service in
development. Paul has contributed to WHOIS policy since his initial
involvement in the domain name space in 1997.
- Johannes Christian Wichard
Johannes Christian Wichard is Head of the Legal Development Section
at the Arbitration and Mediation Center of the World Intellectual
Property Organization (WIPO). WIPO is an international organization
responsible for promoting the protection of intellectual property
throughout the world, and currently has 179 states as members. Over
the past five years, WIPO has played a leading role in making recommendations
and implementing solutions to the problems arising out of the interface
between Internet domain names and intellectual property rights, including
WHOIS issues. Having administered more than 20,000 domain name cases,
the WIPO Arbitration and Mediation Center is the leading provider
for domain name dispute resolution services and has extensive experience
with the practical implementation of the current WHOIS system.
- Alan Wong Chi-kong
Alan Wong Chi-kong is currently the Director of Information Technology
Services Department (ITSD) of the Government of the Hong Kong Special
Administrative Region. The ITSD is responsible for the development
and management of the computer systems of government departments
and the information infrastructure of Hong Kong. It is the government's
technical advisor on IT matters. The ITSD also plays an important
role in enabling citizens and businesses to adopt and use IT securely.
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