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May 4, 2011

IEDR PDP Comments

IEDR PDP Comments
.ie: Ireland's official Internet address

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I submitted a comment to the IEDR’s PDP comment thing earlier today.

In the interests of transparency here it is in its entirety.

Thank you for offering us the opportunity to submit comments on the policy development process

We are a significantly affected party with respect to any and all potential changes to IEDR policy and process and so welcome the opportunity to be able to submit comments on this.

We have invested heavily in promoting the IE namespace both domestically and internationally and any and all comments submitted are based on our deep knowledge and experience of the IEDR’s current policies and modus operandi. While we may be highly critical of the IEDR we wish to go on the record as stating that we do not appreciate our criticism being characterised as “mud slinging”. The overheads involved with registering and managing a large number of .ie domain names is considerable and the workload is exacerbated on an ongoing basis by the registry, its rules and its processes.

We reserve the right to submit additional comments on this process prior to the deadline.

Our main concern at present is that we have little or no confidence in the IEDR’s ability to act as both technical and policy manager for the IE namespace and that this entire process is, therefore, fundamentally flawed.

A large part of the IEDR’s current policies are highly subjective and are therefore open to the personal interpretations of registry staff.

While the IEDR may be willing to make fundamental changes to its modus operandi in order to effect a positive change and improve the operation of the IE namespace so that it works to the mutual benefit of both stakeholders and the registry, we do not feel that the organisation is either capable or sincere in its wishes to make this change.
We also feel that the organisation’s charter and structure, and specifically its governance,  needs to be either fundamentally and radically changed or that a new organisation should be given a mandate to oversee the management and development of the IE namespace.

With respect to the draft document under consideration we have several queries and comments.

“All policy changes will not require a public consultation”

Why not? And who will make the determination on whether a public consultation is needed or not, and based on which criteria? Will this be recorded somewhere?

There seems to be very little guidance contained in the document as to basic rules / operating principles for Working Groups. Maybe this information is contained somewhere else? Idem for mechanisms to be used to recruit volunteers for a WG or obtain public input. Conversely speaking the document is probably over specific when mentioning tools like SurveyMonkey by name.

How will consensus be determined? Is this unanimous consensus, rough consensus? A definition of consensus seems in order. The document mentions ‘consensus is defined as general agreement of the group’, does this mean that if one person disagrees there is no general agreement?

“The PAC may intervene and give recommendations at anytime if required to make the report more acceptable by the majority” – This sounds odd to me and not very constructive. A better approach might be to have a PAC liaison that could serve as a liaison between the WG / PAC and provide input / assistance as appropriate.
What is the mechanism for the PAC to approve the report? Are there different level of ‘approval’? (I guess this might be in the terms of reference that are referred to in the document)
Who will prepare the details of the implementation? There does not seem to be any public comment / consultation foreseen on the implementation plan.

In terms of policies themselves. That the proposed forms would even consider using the concept of “temporary” is just plain wrong. Policies cannot be temporary. They need to be constructed in such a manner that they provide a level of predictability to all stakeholders.

I am still not convinced that this process is transparent enough.

Even if the IEDR staff present policy proposals to their board in an impartial manner there is no way to know how the board will cope with them. As the board is not representative of industry or stakeholders are they even qualified to make a decision on a policy proposal’s validity? From recollection those few changes to policy that were processed in the last 10 years only came about after them being stalled for no good reason by the board on more than one occasion. And as the board’s minutes are not public the reasoning behind any of this will never be known, which brings us back to the topic of the IEDR’s suitabilty to manage the namespace.

It will be interesting to see how this all plays out

 

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December 21, 2009

A Pre-Christmas Gift

A Pre-Christmas Gift

gift

I’ve just posted this on the company blog, but thought I’d mention it here as well…

You can now grab a .ie domain name for the ultra-low price of EUR2.99 ex-VAT via Blacknight (the domain registrar and hosting company I founded)
Use coupon code: chrimbo
More details here

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August 23, 2009

Yet Another Domain Promo – IE Domains For a Fiver!

Just posted this over on the company blog.

We’re doing a special on IE domains (registrations and transfers) at a mere 5 euro.

Full details here

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January 2, 2009

IE Price Slash

We‘ve dropped the price on IE domains for the month of January to €19.95 / year ex-vat

Find out more here

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October 23, 2008

More Inane Junk From IEDR

Either the IEDR believes its own PR or the PR company it uses are clueless.
I’m not sure which one it is.

In any case they’ve pushed out yet another one of those “look at how wonderful we are” type press releases. You know the type. A few facts padded by loads of waffle with pretty much no substance.

Read about it over on my domain blog.

And while talking about the IEDR Tom was good enough to share his insights into the IEDR’s crazy claims

I also decided to put the domain iedrsuck.eu live – nothing very exciting for the moment, but I’m sure I can find new things to do with it

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September 29, 2008

IEDR Comreg and IE Namespace

I’m really tired of the shenanigans involving the IEDR and the IE namespace, so I wrote this rant.

Feedback welcome (on that site :) )

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July 1, 2008

IE Domain Policy / Development – Make Your Voice Heard

I posted about the Comreg public consultation on dotIE on my domain blog the other day, but I feel it’s worthwhile to mention it here as well.

No matter what your opinion is about the IE namespace NOW is the time to make your opinion known.

The consultation paper covers the background of IEDR and then goes into a number of key topics with questions on each one.

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May 13, 2008

IE Domains For 21 Euro

Damn – two Blacknight related posts in the one morning ….

Anyhow .. .As of about half an hour ago we’ve dropped the price on IE domains to 21 euro.

Go to our main site to check for available domains or to transfer your existing domains.

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January 16, 2008

Bebo.ie Updated

It looks like Bebo.ie is returning to its rightful owners!

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October 30, 2007

Personal IE Domains Countdown

In a few short hours the IE domain registry will receive the first batch of applications for “personal” IE domains.

As I’m on the other side of the globe at the moment (in LA) I won’t be around to see what happens. I’m hoping that everything runs smoothly and that our team will do a good job. I’ve every confidence in them, but I’ve also got to be realistic – issues will arise and problems will occur. No matter how much you try to plan around these things it’s impossible to avoid every issue!

In the meantime I’ll be keeping track of what’s going on at the ICANN meeting here in Los Angeles, California.

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