On Thu, Jun 25, 1998 at 08:49:06AM +1000, George Michaelson wrote: > Did I say NOIE were driving it? I think not. But I do want to know when > the next meeting is scheduled, and what the agenda is. Right now, ADNA > is a dead process, and irrelevant from what I can see. > If there isn't an agenda, then I strongly suggest *WE* should make it. Now. The areas of concern that NOIE think we have to sort out before we're going to get community/industry consensus on .au governance are: 1. Stake holders -consensus should be broadly based and inclusive not only of key individuals but also of interest groups from both the supply and demand sides of the industry; 2. Objectives - should be clearly defined and achievable; 3. Principles - should be identified and include the promotion of competition, fair trading and consumer protection; 4. Processes for the development of policy, standards, codes, etc should be inclusive, transparent and accountable; 5. Complaints and dispute resolution mechanisms - consideration needs to be given to the requirement to establish an administrative disputes resolution process; 6. Compliance and enforcement mechanisms - Consideration should be given to the mechanisms and powers required to achieve an effective self regulatory regime; 7. Funding and resources - resource requirements and funding options need to be identified and a self sustaining funding model put in place; 8. Legislative framework - an assessment needs to be made of the requirement for a legislative structure to support an effective self regulatory regime. If we can't figure out how to deal with *all* of these, not just the few that we usually focus on, then we won't get anywhere. For instance, it's clear that one of ADNA's major problems has been 4 - (lack of) inclusive, transparent and accountable processes... yet other than complain about their behaviour we haven't suggested mechanisms that would lead to better processes (and from what I wrote yesterday, the Nominet setup seems to be attracting similar criticism). Number 7, Funding, is also a very difficult one - it might be fine when it's all up and running but it's going to need substantial seed money and there's almost zero probability of getting it from the government -- it *has* to come from "the industry"... KateReceived on Thu Jun 25 1998 - 08:29:01 UTC
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.3.0 : Sat Sep 09 2017 - 22:00:03 UTC