AW: [governance] IANA transition - BR Gov comments on the CCWG-Accountability Draft Proposal

"Kleinwächter, Wolfgang" wolfgang.kleinwaechter at medienkomm.uni-halle.de
Sat Jun 13 05:38:34 EDT 2015


Hi Parminder,

before you continue to confuse well intended but ill informed members of the broader IANA/ICANN/Multistakeholder Internet community, I recommend to study more in
detail the four excellent studies by SSAC

https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/sac-071-en.pdf
https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/sac-069-en.pdf
https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/sac-068-en.pdf
https://www.icann.org/en/system/files/files/sac-067-en.pdf

For newcomers who want to get a first overview before they go into the details, I recommend the new IANA publication (see attachment).    

In the media we have a principle for good journalism which seperates facts and opinions. Bad journalism is mixing facts and opinions. Opinions are protected under Article 19 of the International Covenant of Political and Civil Rights. So everybody has a right to express her(his) ideological opinions and to argue for her/his case. Nothing is wrong with that. Even extreme opinions are protected, as long as they do not harm third parties. In contrary extreme opinions and hard fighting with arguments is needed to find the right way forward if a community is entering uncharted territory (which is the case with the IANA transition). 

There are always  people who (a.) want to keep the status quo, (b.) innovate and stumble forward or (c.) want moving backwards in (their) safe waters. But whatsoever: Any serious discussion of different opinions should be based on full knowledge of the various facets of an issue under discussion. 

There is an important difference here between a journalistic article and an academic paper: In journalism, it is common practice that you pick just one element which fits into your chain of arguments to justify your struggle for a certain outcome. In an academic paper you have to be neutral and to analyze all aspects, regardless if you like the facts or not. Furthermore, any proposed step has to be checked against unintended side-effects. Stresstests are an important element for that. Only with such an approach - called also SWOT (Strengh, Weakness, Opportunity, Threat) - you will find reasonable and workable solutions which balance the interests of all involved parties (and makes everybody probably equally unhappy). 

Fortunately the two CCWG groups who are working now on the IANA transition and new ICANN accountability models have taken the more academic approach which - hopefully - will lead to rough consensus and a sustainable step forward into the "uncharted territory". The interim results are impressive. However there is still a long way to go. More voices are welcome to join the debate. 

Wolfgang
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