Network Working Group                                         S. Bradner
Request for Comments: 2690                            Harvard University
Category: Informational                                   September 1999


   A Proposal for an MOU-Based ICANN Protocol Support Organization

Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
  not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
  memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.

1. Abstract

  This is a copy of the proposal for an MOU-based Protocol Supporting
  Organization that was submitted to ICANN on April 23, 1999.

2. Cover Letter

  This is a copy of the cover letter that was used to submit the draft
  to ICANN.

  Dear Esther,

          Enclosed please find a description of a proposed Protocol
  Support Organization (PSO) for ICANN's consideration.  This
  description is purposefully informal as it is meant to be a basis for
  discussion and not a final formal legal document.

          This proposal was developed primarily by using the open
  Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) poisson working group mailing
  list to discuss successive versions of the proposal.  In addition the
  proposal has benefited from extensive discussion within the IETF's
  Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG) and Internet Architecture
  Board (IAB).  The proposal also benefited from extended discussions
  with representatives of the International Telecommunication Union
  (ITU) and the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C).

          I look forward to ICANN's evaluation of this proposal and am
  also looking forward to the MOU development meeting  noted in section
  1.c of the proposal.





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RFC 2690                   ICANN PSO Proposal             September 1999


  Thanks

  Scott

3. Proposal for a MOU-based PSO

                    ICANN Protocol Supporting Organization

  1. Definition of the PSO.

     a. Purpose.

        The Protocol Support Organization (PSO) will be a consensus-
        based advisory body within the ICANN framework.

     b. Components.

        The PSO will establish a "Protocol Council" and host an annual
        open meeting (known as the "General Assembly" (described
        below)).

     c. Creation through a Memorandum of Understanding.

        Arrangements regarding the PSO are to be reflected in a
        Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) among ICANN and a group of
        open international Internet related standards development
        organizations (SDOs). SDOs must satisfy a set of objective
        criteria before they can be considered for membership. (see
        Appendix A) After ICANN has accepted a proposal for an ICANN
        PSO, including the SDO criteria, a meeting, open to all SDOs
        that believe they meet the criteria, will be held to develop
        the MOU.

        All existing MOU signatories must agree to the admission of new
        signatories. Rejected applicants can appeal to the ICANN Board
        where a 2/3rds majority can override such a rejection if the
        board finds the SDO meets the criteria.

  2. The Protocol Council

     a. Members

        The Protocol Council will have up to [12] individual members
        selected by the SDO signatories of the MOU. (see below)







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     b. Term

        The term of Protocol Council members will be 2 years. Removal
        will be pursuant to procedures established through the MOU.
        (Initial terms will be 1 and 2 years to provide initial
        conditions for staggered terms.)

     c. Powers/Duties of the Protocol Council

        i   Appointment of ICANN Directors

            The Protocol Council will nominate 3 Directors to the ICANN
            Board (By-laws, Art. V, Sec. 4(iii)). The initial directors
            would have terms of 1, 2 and 3 years (By-laws, Art. V, Sec.
            9(d)

            The Protocol Council will conduct an open call for
            nominations for any open PSO seats on the ICANN board. Each
            SDO signatory to the MOU is entitled to nominate candidates
            by procedures of its own choosing. Additionally,
            nominations from the public at large should be allowed
            under conditions to be defined by the Protocol Council.

            The Protocol Council will select the PSO nominees to the
            ICANN board from among these nominees by a means of its own
            choosing.

        ii  Qualifications of ICANN Directors

            No more than 2 PSO-nominated Directors may come from the
            same geographic region.

        iii Role of ICANN Directors

            The Directors appointed by the Protocol Council will not
            represent the PSO on the Board, but will function as full
            Directors of ICANN.  (By-laws, Art. V, Sec. 8)

        iv  Advisory Role

            The Protocol Council will advise the Board of ICANN on
            matters referred to the Protocol Council by the ICANN
            Board. As per the ICANN By-laws, only matters relating to
            the assignment of parameters for Internet protocols would
            be so referred.






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     d. Policy Development

        In the tradition of the Internet, standards development
        policies and conflict resolution mechanisms should be created
        by those institutions most directly involved, without undue
        interference from centralized bodies.

        The ICANN By-laws vest in the PSO the primary responsibility
        for developing and recommending substantive policies in the
        area of protocol parameter assignment.  The PSO is committed to
        the proposition that policies for parameter assignments for
        particular protocols are the responsibility of the individual
        SDO that developed the protocol. The Protocol Council will be
        available as needed by the SDOs to develop policies and
        procedures for conflict resolution between SDOs. (By-laws, New
        Art. VI, Sec. 2(b)). Any policies must be adopted by consensus
        of all SDOs.  The ICANN Board of Directors will take no
        addition action regarding disputes between SDOs related to
        protocol assignment or registration.

  3. Annual Open Meeting (General Assembly)

     a. Hosting an open meeting

        The Protocol Council will periodically host an open meeting
        ("General Assembly") for promoting discussion and receiving
        input regarding the work of the PSO. A General Assembly meeting
        will be held at least once per year, and will permit open
        participation by all interested individuals.

        The annual open meeting will be held in conjunction with a
        major meeting of one of the SDOs that have signed the MOU.
        (with an effort to hold no 2 consecutive meetings in the same
        geographic region.

        It is expected that the major SDOs within the Internet protocol
        standards development community will provide the constituency
        of the General Assembly.

     b. Selection of Protocol Council Members

        Prior to the annual open meeting, the Protocol Council shall
        make an open call for nominations to the upcoming vacancies in
        the Protocol Council. Each SDO signatory to the PSO MOU will be
        entitled to make nominations for some or all of the vacant
        seats by a procedure of its own choosing. In the event that
        there are more nominees than vacancies, an election will be
        held in which each SDO signatory to the PSO MOU has equal votes.



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        Protocol Council Members should fairly represent, to the extent
        reasonable, all constituencies within the member SDOs,
        including the major technical areas and geographical regions.

  4. Open Proceedings and Documents

     a. Communications between ICANN and the PSO

        All communications between ICANN and the PSO will be made
        public on the PSO web site. In the event that ICANN requests
        that a communication be kept confidential, the PSO will honor
        this request for a fixed period of time not to exceed one year,
        and then make the communication public.

     b. PSO Proceedings

        All discussions of PSO business will be conducted on a
        publicly-archived mailing list accessible through the PSO web
        site. The schedule for the PSO meetings will be posted 90 days
        in advance of the meeting date. The agenda for the Protocol
        Council and annual open meetings will be posted on the PSO web
        site at least 30 days before the meetings.  The minutes from
        all PSO meetings will be publicly posted on the PSO web site
        within 30 days of the meeting.

  5. Review of MOU

     The MOU signatories will periodically review the results and
     consequences of their cooperation under the MOU. When appropriate,
     the signatories will consider the need for improvements in the MOU
     and make suitable proposals for modifying and updating the
     arrangements and scope of the MOU.

  6. Recognition

     ICANN will officially recognize the PSO described in this memo as
     the PSO under the ICANN By-laws Art. 6, Sec. 3.














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Appendix A - requirements for consideration as a PSO-qualified SDO

     SDOs must be open, international, voluntary technical standard and
     technical specification development organizations which:

     1) Develop standards and/or specifications for use over the public
        Internet.

     2) Can demonstrate active membership in the IP-related standards
        and/or specification development process of more than 1000
        individuals, if individual memberships are used by the
        organization, or 100 companies, if corporate memberships are
        used by the organization.

     3) Has been in operation for 3 or more years at the time of their
        application.

     4) Can demonstrate that there is significant deployment of its
        standards on the Internet.

     5) The significant protocols controlled by the organization can be
        implemented without paying a licensing fee to the organization

     Open international voluntary standards bodies are defined as
     international organizations that plan, develop or establish
     voluntary standards.

     An organization shall be considered open and international if its
     standards and/or specifications development process is open to any
     person or organization of any nationality on equitable terms. It
     shall be considered voluntary if it makes no claim to compel use
     of its standards and specifications.

     In either case, to be considered as 'international', the voting
     (or other "full") membership must include individuals or companies
     primarily located in at least three different regions and at least
     two different countries within each of those regions.














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RFC 2690                   ICANN PSO Proposal             September 1999


4. Security Considerations

  This type of non-protocol document does not directly effect the
  security of the Internet.

5. Editor's Address

  Scott Bradner
  Harvard University
  1350 Mass Ave, rm 876
  Cambridge, MA
  02138
  USA

  Phone: +1 617 495 3864
  EMail: [email protected]



































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RFC 2690                   ICANN PSO Proposal             September 1999


6. Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
  others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
  and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
  kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
  included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
  document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
  the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
  Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
  developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
  copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
  followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
  English.

  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
  revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

  This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
  TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
  BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
  HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
  MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.



















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