Leni Thanks for your post - its a keeper! Warm regards Gary At 16:28 26/02/98 +1100, you wrote: >The ADNA membership criteria is a significant stumbling-block on which >there has been no movement. It >1. fails to separate policy from operations. >2. creates an exclusive club rather than an inclusive framework. > >I've been wondering why the criteria were designed in this way. One can >only speculate that the drafters didn't want the body to have a life and >voice of it's own. The present population sees the individual voices >within ADNA all with separate voices in their role with other industry >orgs. > >This has problems: > >1. A body that's essentially composed of reps from other > bodies is often slow and unwieldy. > These are volunteer jobs and people tend to get spread too thin. > >2. No support for broad and inclusive participation. > Folks who want to particpate must: >2.1. become a DNA (sorry, not yet) >2.2. join an industry organisation > (which one? why should I have to? > That still doesn't get me onto ADNA!) >2.3. Do something spectacular to become a life member > (impersonate kre?) > >3. No support for a model that allows hundreds > of registrars to compete on price and service. > That would leave the policy folks vastly outnumbered. > >4. The funding relationship between the classes of membership > is under constant tension. > Registrars should pay for the privilege. > Policy people get to donate their time, but shouldn't have to > pay as well. > >A moment to compare this with the gTLD structure, where the IAHC >drafters provided a means for the community to participate directly. > >Someone full of energy rolls up and asks: "hey, I'm an >ISP/lawyer/student/journalist/citizen. How do I get involved?". >Answer: sign the gTLD-MOU (a set of principles for good government of >the DNS) and thereby join an advisory body called the PAB, which is sort >of equivalent to this mailing list. The PAB then gets to elect part of >the memberhip of the policy body, the POC (which is what ADNA should >turn itself into) and the registrars have a life of their own in a >separate body and provide funding for the whole exercise. The >registrars get a couple of non-voting seats on the POC to keep them >sane. > >So policy and oversight are separate. The sources of funding don't >interfere with the framing of policy. And anyone can participate. All >of which are important for public perceptions of legitimacy. > >Leni. > >Kate Lance wrote: > >> | How does one become a member of ADNA? >> >> >From the ADNA Memorandum of Association: (see >> http://www.adna.asn.au/) >> >> 2.2.1 ADNA consists of the following classes of members: >> Full Members; Associate Members; and Life Members. >> >> 2.3 Qualification for Full Membership >> Any Organisation that is a non-profit organisation, its objects >> >> including the development and furtherance of the Internet or >> aspects >> of the Internet, may apply to be a Full Member. >> >> 2.4 Qualification for Associate Membership >> Any Domain Name Administrator may apply to become an Associate >> Member. >> >> 2.5 Qualification for Life Membership >> Any natural person, Organisation or Entity that has rendered >> distinguished service to ADNA, or the objects of ADNA may be >> admitted >> by a resolution of the Board as a Life Member. >> >> >> | How does one go about becoming a board member of ADNA? >> >> Full and Associate members pay $1000 a year fees. >> Up to 6 Board members are nominated and elected by the Full members, >> and 2 Board members are nominated and elected by the Associate >> members. >> A Life member has no voting rights. >> >> >> | If not what is the most effective way of having ones opinions and >> those of >> | numerous others heard by the board? >> >> I'm not sure. ISOC-AU has been in discussion with ADNA since August >> 1997 >> (as discussed in their meeting minutes) without any effective progress >> >> being apparent. >> >> Kate Lance > > > > >Received on Fri Feb 27 1998 - 10:25:43 UTC
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