(no hats, as I haven't discussed with my co-chair and AD.)

On May 27, 2015, at 3:22 PM, Lyman Chapin <ly...@interisle.net> wrote:

> We don't know each other, but if I may assume that you work for Uniregistry 
> (apologies if I'm jumping to the wrong conclusion from the domain name in 
> your email address), you have a clear conflict of interest as a gTLD 
> applicant for "home". Your viewpoint and comments are still valuable, and I 
> mean no disrespect when I suggest that you have a conflict; but I hope that 
> when Tim and Suzanne refer to "consensus of the WG" they mean "except for WG 
> participants who have a clear COI".

For the reasons pointed out by Jim Reid in the next message, I think this heads 
in the wrong direction.

Perhaps more to the point, my experience of the IETF suggests that since 
contending interests are a fact of life, and that WG discussion frequently 
engages vendors, their competitors, their customers, and their vendors all at 
once, claims about others' conflicts of interest are a poor substitute for 
addressing arguments on the merits (which you get full credit for attempting to 
do, and can stand on its own).

> Having heard no (disinterested) objection to putting corp, home, and mail in 
> the special-use name registry defined by RFC 6761, perhaps the WG chairs 
> would proceed with a call for adoption of 
> draft-chapin-additional-reserved-tlds-02 -

It would be helpful to me in discerning consensus to separate two different 
concepts here.

1. Delegating home/corp/mail in the root zone would be bad.
2. Adding home/corp/mail to the special-use name registry would be good.

Again, trying my best to speak as a disinterested observer of the discussion, 
I've seen little support for such delegations(1). I've seen a couple of 
arguments that seem to have strong support against such delegations.

However, that's not the question in front of the WG. The IETF doesn't decide 
what goes into the root zone. ICANN does, and appears to have already decided 
(stipulating that not everyone believes them, which strikes me as a separate 
problem) not to add those names to the root zone.

The question in front of the WG is whether to propose adding those names to the 
IETF registry for special-use names(2). I've heard support for that, but I've 
also heard a number of objections to such additions, and I'm having trouble 
telling how much the support for (2) is really support for (1) or vice versa.

It remains less than obvious to me what outcome is being sought here. I first 
thought it was to influence the body that *does* decide what goes into the root 
zone against a possible future change in policy, but it's also been repeatedly 
asserted that no, the proposal is motivated by operational considerations.

I realize I may be dim, but what operational impact is sought here?  What 
change in server or resolver configuration are administrators expected to make? 
Is there some other possible source of name collisions besides a change in the 
root zone that we can or should be guarding against? Given that the problem 
people seem concerned about developed entirely outside of any action by the 
IETF, how does the IETF acting now help?

I understand the argument that the IETF can and should prevent such a misstep 
by ICANN, so reiterating it won't help me. 


thanks,
Suzanne

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