[governance] For information
Jefsey
jefsey at jefsey.com
Wed Mar 11 15:03:18 EDT 2015
The Honorable Lawrence E. Strickling
Assistant Secretary for Communications & Information
National Telecommunications & Information Administration
United States Department of Commerce
1401 Constitution Ave., N.W.
Washington, DC 20230
Saint-Vincent de Barbeyrargues, March 11, 2015
Dear Assistant Secretary Strickling,
On March 14, 2014, you asked the Internet Corporation for Assigned
Names and Numbers (ICANN) to convene global stakeholders to develop a
proposal to transition the current role played by NTIA in the
coordination of the Internet's domain name system (DNS). You also
have informed ICANN that you expected that in the development of the
proposal, ICANN will work collaboratively with the directly affected
parties, including the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), the
Internet Architecture Board (IAB), the Internet Society (ISOC), the
Regional Internet Registries (RIRs), top level domain name operators,
VeriSign, and other interested global stakeholders.
Shortly after March 14, 2014, ICANN
<http://singapore49.icann.org/en/schedule/mon-iana-accountability>launched
a multistakeholder process and discussion to gather community views
and input on the principles and mechanisms for a different issue: the
transitioning of NTIA's stewardship of the IANA functions.
Following a month-long
<https://www.icann.org/news/announcement-d8-2014-04-10-en>call for
input on the community-driven draft proposal, on June 6, ICANN posted
the
<https://www.icann.org/resources/pages/process-next-steps-2014-06-06-en>Process
to Develop the Proposal and Next Steps.
Then, following a call for names, the IANA Stewardship Transition
Coordination Group (ICG) was formed, comprising individuals selected
by each represented community. These 30 individuals represent 13
communities of both direct and indirect stakeholders who together
will deliver a proposal to the NTIA recommending a transition plan of
NTIA's stewardship of IANA functions to the Internet community,
consistent with the key principles that you outlined in your March 14
announcement.
The ICG coordinates with 13 "communities", which are:
* Address Supporting Organization (ASO)
* Country Code Names Supporting Organisation (ccNSO and
non-ccNSO Country Code Top-Level Domain [ccTLD] operators, as
selected by the ccNSO)
* Generic Names Supporting Organization (GNSO). GNSO seats from
non-Registry representation
* Generic Top Level Domain Registries (gTLD Registries)
* Governmental Advisory Committee (GAC)
* International Chamber of Commerce/ Business Action to Support
the Information Society (ICC/BASIS)
* Internet Architecture Board (IAB)
* Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
* Internet Society (ISOC)
* Number Resource Organization (NRO)
* Root Server System Advisory Committee (RSSAC)
* Security and Stability Advisory Committee (SSAC)
None of them represent the directly affected largest party, i.e. the
lead and end users and the civil society organizations. As a part of
this large and open community, a pioneer of the international
network, and a member of the Libre community, I considered that my
best chance to get my position heard would be through the technical
community open, collective, and balanced work.
Does RFC 3869 of the IAB not state?
"The principal thesis of this document is that if commercial funding
is the main source of funding for future Internet research, the
future of the Internet infrastructure could be in trouble. In
addition to issues about which projects are funded, the funding
source can also affect the content of the research, for example,
towards or against the development of open standards, or taking
varying degrees of care about the effect of the developed protocols
on the other traffic on the Internet."
while the RFC 6852 from the same IAB states:
"We embrace a modern paradigm for standards where the economics of
global markets, fueled by technological advancements, drive global
deployment of standards regardless of their formal status."
"In this paradigm standards support interoperability, foster global
competition, are developed through an open participatory process, and
are voluntarily adopted globally. These voluntary standards serve as
building blocks for products and services targeted at meeting the
needs of the market and consumer, thereby driving innovation.
Innovation in turn contributes to the creation of new markets and the
growth and expansion of existing markets."
The IETF document preparation work has been carried out in three phases:
* A "status quo" position decided by the RFC 3774 socalled "IETF
affinity group" documented in a WG/IANAPLAN charter.
* A work accomplished by that WG/IANAPLAN
* A review by the whole IETF mailing list open to everyone but
me, (I am the moderator of the <mailto:iucg at ietf.org>iucg at ietf.org
non-WG mailing list of the Internet Users Contributing Group)
This consensus leads to a technological fork of the internet
architecture at a time where the RFC 6852 paradigm opens a
permissionless innovation area. To avoid this leading to a technical
jeopardy, the IETF position document should address a certain number
of questions permitting other SDOs, Libre projects, and other
reentrant architectures to transparently use the same basic catenet
infrastructure without mutual negative interferences. To that end,
the IETF consensus should be enriched by the responses to a certain
number of questions because at this stage it is not sufficiently
understandable.
RFC 2026 defined the internet standardization process that addresses
this situation through the appeal process. I am, therefore, appealing
to the IESG, with the intent to ensure that the IAB and ISOC also
address what belongs to their own areas of responsibility.
The text of this appeal is temporarily at the URL:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/ckqaaq0ngqed0ie/iesg-appeal-inanaplan.pdf?dl=0
It should soon be listed at http://www.ietf.org/iesg/appeal.html
Respectfully yours,
Jean-François C. (Jefsey) MORFIN
Moderator iucg at ietf.org
IETF contributions and appeals are in private capacity.
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