The contention over WHOIS and privacy continues, with a lot of attention shifting to the GAC. The Governmental Advisory Committee entered into meetings with the GNSO about this on Sunday afternoon. Bruce Tonkin, GNSO Council chair, and Jordyn Buchanan, chair of the WHOIS policy task force, did this long-running task force a bit of a disservice. Their presentations to GAC made it seem as if the task force is evenly split when in fact, due to weighted voting and the support of the Nomcom representatives on the Council, the reform forces are at or near a supermajority of 2/3. They also gave the Task Force-recommended OPoC proposal, supported by a preponderance of the GNSO, equal time with the trademark/copyright interests' "special circumstances" proposal, which imposes a huge burden on domain name registrants to prove they are worthy of shielding their data. I spoke publicly at this meeting, pointing out that the real roadbock to progress was the intransigence of the trademark/copyright interests and their attempt to link their needs to the legitimate needs of law enforcement authorities. Indeed, only reason the trademark/copyright people made any concessions at all was the April 2006 vote on Whois purpose which showed that a 2/3 majority of the council supported privacy protection in whois data. Bottom line: if you want movement on this issue, you have to vote; further attempts at "consensus" only play into the hands of those who favor the status quo.
The GAC also passed (so I heard) their "Principles Regarding gTLD Whois Services." It is a typically schizophrenic document. The EU forces seem to have forced the US to accept language indicating that there are "legitimate concerns" about abuse of unrestricted access to Whois data, and the "conflict with national laws and regulations, in particular applicable privacy and data protection laws." One of the applicable principles is that "gTLD WHOIS services must comply with applicable national laws and regulations."
At the same time, the bulk of the document consists of a laundry list of current uses of Whois, which the document deems "legitimate." A strange paragraph about abuses of ICTs such as "racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia, and related intolerance, hatred, violence, all forms of child abuse, including paedophilia and child pornography, and trafficking in, and exploitation of, human beings" has been added, showing that governments' tendency to seek to use ICANN to engage in wide-raning censorship and other forms of policy leverage unrelated to technical coordination remains. And the recommendations of the GAC statement are truly insulting, in that they call only for greater accuracy and a "study" of other problems, and thus only advance one stakeholder group's agenda.
A joint dinner of ICANN Board members and GNSO leaders last night tried to focus discussion on the LSE recommendations for reforming the GNSO. Some of us are very interested in constituency restructuring, and in particular LSE's recommendations that the number be reduced to three: Business users, Civil Society users, and the Supply Industry (registries and registrars). Some supported that idea. One Board member proposed a different tripartite structure: registries, registrants, and registrars. In general, there was not a lot of support among the dominant, more conservative board members could be found for a major restructuring, although of course the trademark/copyright interests criticized weighted voting for registries and registrars.

