ICANN Staff Background Paper Catalogues Extreme Dangers to Registrants of URS Reconfiguration

Philip CorwinBlog

Last week we became aware of an ICANN staff document, “Briefing Paper on Defensive Registrations at the Second Level”, prepared just in advance of the Prague meeting (available at http://gnso.icann.org/en/correspondence/defensive-registrations-briefing-paper-04jun12-en.pdf). While not the intended purpose, this document reveals much about what is wrong with ICANN’s internal policymaking processes, as well as the substantial danger to registrant rights posed by any “Summit” or other event convened for the purpose of “reconfiguration” of the Uniform Rapid Suspension (URS) rights protection mechanism required for all new gTLDs.

A Process without End

To understand the flawed policy process that this memo reveals, one need only review this background information justifying the promulgation of the staff memo –

In response to the DOC letter and right holder concerns, ICANN conducted a public comment period (closed on 20 March) on the perceived need for defensive applications at the top level in addition to the existing protections for established legal rights that are available, and how this perceived need might be addressed. Although the public forum requested community input on the perceived need for defensive applications at the top level, many of the submitted comments focused on protections at the second level.

Given the effort and thoughtfulness of these comments, ICANN wanted to capture the concerns and issues raised by the community in relation to defensive registrations at the second level. On 12 April 2012, the ICANN Board’s New gTLD Committee adopted a resolution directing the staff “to provide a briefing paper on the topic of defensive registrations at the second level.”1 This briefing paper is being submitted to the GNSO to facilitate a GNSO decision of whether further policy discussions are warranted to address this issue and/or the protections in second-level registrations. (Emphasis added)

Let’s put what happened into plain English: ICANN conducted a public comment process early this year on the subject of defensive registrations at the top level of new gTLDs, in part spurred by a letter from the Department of Commerce (DOC) expressing concerns that had been fed into DOC by parties who generally opposed the entire new gTLD program. Once that process was open, various trademark groups who had never accepted the final details for the Trademark Clearinghouse (TMC) and the URS as worked out through ICANN’s much-vaunted multi-stakeholder consensus process misappropriated the comment period to once again push for second level changes that had been previously rejected by the STI-RT, the GNSO, and ICANN’s Board (with the final  Board rejection being to proposals from the Governmental Advisory Committee (GAC), itself under intense lobbying  pressure from these TM interests).

ICA responded to that comment process hijacking attempt with its own letter (see http://internetcommerce.org/Defensive_Registrations_Second_Level) in which we urged ICANN to resist this transparent pressure:

Nonetheless, certain trademark interests abused the comment period to request substantive changes in and additions to new rights protection mechanisms (RPMs) at the second level, including alterations of Uniform Rapid Suspension (URS) that would render it a cut-rate alternative to the Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP) at the expense of cheapening registrant rights. These commentators are seeking to have a fifth bite at the policy process apple in regard to second level protections…There is an initial group of suggestions that we oppose both on substantive grounds and because their addition now, after the first application round has commenced, would make material changes in the program and are not mere technical implementation details. Any such changes of this nature should be made only on the basis of experience with the first round – and then only through ICANN’s multi-stakeholder process with the requirement of Board approval.

Rather than just rejecting these attempts to once again scuttle the URS consensus model, the Board’s New gTLD Committee (consisting of non-conflicted Board members) inexplicably took them seriously and directed staff to prepare the briefing paper, which in turn was forwarded to the GNSO policymaking body for gTLDs so that it can discuss whether it should renew discussions on this thoroughly digested subject.

In May, when we learned of the Resolution requesting the staff paper, we made this comment (http://internetcommerce.org/URS_Redux%3F):

But we’ve learned that we often perceive things differently than ICANN’s staff, which also declared in the past year that procedural UDRP reform was such a sensitive and highly charged topic that it would be too destabilizing to even discuss it for the next several years, when we thought we had detected a clear community consensus in favor of starting that process now and not in mid-2014.

Any reopening of the issue of defensive registrations at the second level of new gTLDs will likely focus on altering the URS, since the draft implementation model for the Trademark Clearinghouse (TMC) was completed and circulated on April 13th and will likely be finalized in May…One of the highest priorities for some trademark interests has been to turn the URS into a bargain basement priced, rough justice substitute for the already flawed UDRP…

Summing up, what has happened here is that, for no discernible reason, the New gTLD Program Committee has issued a staff directive and a GNSO request that could well lead to reopening one of the most divisive issues of the entire new gTLD program…

We don’t have any idea where this Resolution will lead – like so many ICANN processes it may go nowhere, slowly. But we are disturbed that trademark interests who abused the comment period on defensive registrations at the top level have now apparently been rewarded with the prospect of reopening the second level debate. (Emphasis added)

So there are three important lessons here:

  1. 1.    If you ignore the proper scope of matters addressed in ICANN public comment periods and abuse the process to once again raise previously rejected suggestions you will be rewarded with a staff paper and a suggestion that time once again be expended to revisit your rejected suggestions.
  2. 2.    ICANN has no standard procedure for shutting down policy processes which have clearly run their course, and which should be put on extended hold until new facts arise that justify a renewed inquiry.
  3. 3.    Trademark/brand interests can string out the policy process as long as they wish, engaging in a war of attrition in which ICANN, having improvidently reopened what should be closed matters, puts itself in a position of being pressured to make yet further concessions. Registrants, on the other hand, are rebuffed when they suggest that UDRP procedures might be reviewed after more than a decade of usage because any such inquiry would be too unsettling to the ICANN community.
  4. 4.     

A URS That Guts Registrant Rights

Let’s now turn to that section of the staff paper that lists TM interest suggestions for “improvements”:

           

URS – 1) Establish a transfer remedy and a lower “preponderance of the evidence” standard of proof; remove any requirement that a URS provider make any substantive determination about how a trademark owner is “using” its mark. 2) Implement a “loser pays” model to all URS proceedings regardless of how many domain names one registers in bad faith. 3) Reduce the filing fee to make it a relatively inexpensive mechanism (e.g., $300-$500). As an alternative, if the URS cannot be offered at this price range, then ICANN should consider having its registrars implement a notice and takedown process.

Let’s look at each in turn:

  1. 1.    This would lower the complainants’ burden of proof to the same standard that now exists for UDRP filings, and also provide for transfer of the domain as a remedy. This would convert the URS from a narrow substitute for the UDRP to a cut-rate alternative with considerably less in the way of registrant protections – which has been the goal of many TM interests all along, to be followed by foisting this unbalanced system on .com and other incumbent gTLDs. If they were to ever achieve it they could then block balanced UDRP reform from ever happening, since they would have obtained all the “reform” they could ever dream of. Lowering the threshold for a valid trademark claim would also further the likelihood of abusive complaints.
  2. 2.    A “loser pays” model for even a single domain would just intimidate most registrants, primarily individuals and small businesses, from contesting any URS complaint brought against them by large, deep-pocketed brand interests. A little history is useful here – in April 2011 ICANN adopted a “loser pays” model for registrants having 26 or more domains in dispute (see http://internetcommerce.org/ICANN%E2%80%99s_Latest_gTLD_Guidebook_Issued): A limited “loser pays’ model has been adopted – but it is not the “loser pays” model the GAC was pushing for. That would have placed the entire financial burden on a losing registrant for all fees related to the URS as well as the complainant’s legal fees. This model would require registrants who face a complaint listing 26 or more disputed domain names simultaneously to deposit a “Response Fee”, the amount of which is unspecified other than that it cannot exceed the filing fee charged to the complainant. This Response Fee goes to the prevailing party, so in essence this is an administrative fee charged to a registrant who has just over two dozen names in contention simultaneously via a single complaint. Succumbing to later pressure, the threshold was knocked down by the Board in June 2011 (see http://internetcommerce.org/node/276): The threshold for a “loser pays” requirement was lowered from 26 to 15 domains in a single URS proceeding. The TM lobby, which should be happy that it got a “loser pays” option included in the URS for serial cybersquatters, instead wants to make it a general rule to scare off registrants regardless of the validity of their single domain registrations.
  3. 3.    We have known for at least a year that a $300-500 filing fee for the URS model we now have, which contains some decent due process protection for registrant rights, is just not realistic. Yet ICANN has done no discernible analysis of how various elements of the URS affect its costs for the purpose of effecting efficient process changes that don’t reopen policy controversies, nor has it put out an RFP that could be responded to by a broader array of qualified arbitration providers than the usual suspects at WIPO (which has made clear its hostility to the current URS) and NAF (which is offering a $1300 suspension process at .XXX and may be reluctant to undercut that pricing with a less costly URS). So we again urge that ICANN establish and open and transparent implementation group to grapple with these questions so that the failure to have a settled URS in place does not become an obstacle to timely launch of new gTLD delegations next year. As for a “notice and takedown” being imposed on registrars, that concept may be worthy of discussion if and when we ever get a UDRP reform process going – but given the difficulties with both RPM implementation and the ongoing Registrar Accreditation Agreement (RAA) negotiations, introducing this concept at this time would only further complicate matters.

Let’s be clear – any URS reconfiguration process premised on the notion that it must meet an unrealistic price target will consider all the terrible ideas listed above because eliminating registrant due process rights is the one sure way to get a cheap, and cheapened, URS. That strategy fits right in with WIPO’s suggestion, as a pre-condition for hosting any URS “summits”, that ICANN’s Board commit in advance to a “respondent-default basis without panel, subject to appropriate safeguards” – which means that any registrant failing to file a response within the truncated 14-day response time would automatically lose, without any examiner ever reviewing the initial complaint to see if the rights holder actually possessed rights and if the complaint presented a prima facie case of TM infringement by a preponderance of the evidence. References to ‘appropriate safeguards” in this context are just ludicrous – the only real registrant safeguard is to have each complaint reviewed by a neutral and competent IP attorney. (Note: The STI-RT URS model provided a 20-day time period for registrant response, but in September 2010 ICANN’s Board unilaterally reduced that to 14 days under TM interest pressure.)

Summing up, any URS Summit holds the real prospect, if artificially low pricing is the paramount o
bjective, of producing a revised URS that is the functional equivalent of the UDRP – but at a fraction of the price, and with a much shorter registrant response period, a “loser pays” requirement for even a single domain in dispute, and no examiner involvement in default cases where the registrant does not file a response within 14 days.

The TM community’s agenda has been well documented by ICANN staff, and no one should be surprised to see them push hard for these goals if ICANN is reckless enough to reopen settled URS policy instead of implementing the consensus policy that now exists.

A Flawed Recommendation

The staff paper concludes with a suggestion “that the GNSO Council consider utilizing one of its available processes such as requesting an Issue Report or conducting a policy discussion to address the issue whether additional work on defensive registrations at the second level should be undertaken”. In other words, the GNSO should reopen what should be a closed policy matter.

We believe that recommendation is deeply flawed and have an alternative suggestion – the GNSO Council should tell the Board New gTLD Committee and TM interests that the original URS model produced by the STI-RT has already been altered in many fundamental ways under relentless pressure from those TM interests who pay lip service to the multi-stakeholder process but do not respect its results, and that further changes will not be considered until new gTLDs are up and running and we can gather actual experience of the extent of TM abuse and the effectiveness of the current RPMs.  

The priority now should be to implement the existing URS model. That implementation should be accomplished by an open and transparent Implementation Advisory Group (IAG) operating in much the same way as the IAG that has done so much effective work on the Trademark Clearinghouse (TMC).

In sum, it’s way past time to call a halt to the RPM policy tinkering process, as well as way past time for  the initiation of URS implementation. A successful new gTLD program cannot be built upon an altar of eviscerated registrant rights.