[governance] Re: The due diligence process for ICANN NomCom appointees
Avri Doria
avri at acm.org
Thu Dec 16 11:05:23 EST 2010
Hi George,
All well and good. I have only advised people to make sure they knew what they were getting into.
I find it interesting to now know that the Corporate Secretary, also an ICANN legal staff employee, is informed of all of the private information obtained. In the past, I was told no one from ICANN staff saw any of it. Now we know it is at least nobody - 1 see it. What about the rest of his staff, also ICANN employees? Anyone else? The opacity of this process, consistent with ICANN's culture of secrecy, makes the entire chain of custody for the private information very suspect.
Note, I agree with the need for due diligence when if comes to Board members who have fiduciary responsibility. I do not agree with the ICANN Staff being responsible for it or having access to this information.
As for the arduous process, I was not referring to the due diligence per se. That is just a simple form where you sign away your privacy rights, and I have signed it several times. I am referring to the application process and the long forms required of one's references. And then the long wait in the dark while the process unwinds with the only news one gets being the rumors that always leak. I encourage people to know what they are getting involved in.
I encourage people to consider the nomcom process, but I warn them to make sure they know what they are getting into first. But I mostly ask them to consider getting involved in the give and take of ICANN's working group process where the work is actually done.
a.
On 16 Dec 2010, at 10:52, George Sadowsky wrote:
> All,
>
> I would respectfully disagree with Avri's reaction to the privacy implications of the degree of due diligence that ICANN applies to selected nominees for the positions to be filled by the Nominating Committee. I speak from my experience as Chair of the Nominating Committee in 2005, 2006, and 2007, and I doubt that the due diligence process has changed significantly since that time.
>
> Being on the Board of a Corporation comes with a serious fiduciary responsibility for its proper fiscal management. Corporations must perform adequate due diligence on prospective Directors. We have all seen news reports of people who claimed non-existent degrees, or worse, licenses to practice medicine. It's important to ensure that there is an adequate understanding of the backgrounds of people to whom Directorships are offered. A lesser degree of due diligence is appropriate for membership on the Councils of the Supporting organizations.
>
> I have executed due diligence processes for the NomCom for three years. With one exception that required full discussion, only I and the Corporation Secretary have been privy to the results. Further, I have gone through the due diligence process myself, and I found it neither objectionably invasive nor uncomfortable.
>
> Bottom line: if you are interested in ICANN leadership positions, I would encourage you to apply, and to consider the due diligence process an understandable and necessary part of the selection process.
>
>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
> At 8:58 AM -0500 12/16/10, Avri Doria wrote:
>> On 16 Dec 2010, at 07:12, Adam Peake wrote:
>>
>>>> http://blog.icann.org/2010/12/planned-changes-to-ipv4-reverse-dns-infrastructure/
>>>
>>>
>>> No, this <http://blog.icann.org/2010/12/2011-nominating-committee-opens-up/>
>>>
>>> :-)
>>>
>>> Adam
>>>
>>
>>
>> Think carefully before you get involved in the the ICANN nomcom process. Make sure you understand the incredible degree of privacy you will have to give up to ICANN and its hired investigators before going through a very long and arduous process that is likely to leave you, and those you ask for references, feeling very burned.
>>
>> It is not that I recommend against getting involved, and I encourage as many people as possible to get involved in the working groups and other efforts that are open to all. I just recommend caution when getting involved with its Nomcom - get a full picture first of what they will ask of you, especially if you are chosen. And make sure you are comfortable with the role of the ICANN staff, the access they (especially their legal department) may or may not have with the information their investigators find and the degree of guarantee you are given on the protection of your privacy.
>>
>> a.
>
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