Line 69: |
Line 69: |
| * Last year the RrSG became a formal professional (as opposed to commercial) association, and they held their first General Assembly at ICANN 71. Their legal office is located in Germany ([[Thomas Rickert]] Law Firm) so that they can have their own bank account and credit card. | | * Last year the RrSG became a formal professional (as opposed to commercial) association, and they held their first General Assembly at ICANN 71. Their legal office is located in Germany ([[Thomas Rickert]] Law Firm) so that they can have their own bank account and credit card. |
| * [[Liz Behsudi]] from the [[I&JN]] gave a presentation on the think tank's [https://www.internetjurisdiction.net/domains/toolkit DNS Abuse toolkit]. She discussed legal interoperability, the think tank's three foci, domains, content, and data, the importance of different thresholds for responses to DNS Abuse and understanding the typology of notifiers, and why the EU electronic evidence proposal may affect whois data. | | * [[Liz Behsudi]] from the [[I&JN]] gave a presentation on the think tank's [https://www.internetjurisdiction.net/domains/toolkit DNS Abuse toolkit]. She discussed legal interoperability, the think tank's three foci, domains, content, and data, the importance of different thresholds for responses to DNS Abuse and understanding the typology of notifiers, and why the EU electronic evidence proposal may affect whois data. |
− | * [[Graeme Bunton]] presented on developments at the [[DNS Abuse Institute]], which is following the logic that there are two ways to reduce DNS abuse: # prevent it or # react to it. Bunton explained that economic realities indicate that there should be more emphasis on reactive solutions because they don’t have to be integrated into current technology. He also discussed [[CART]], which will include domain look-up, who’s reporting, type of malware/spam, and required information so that registrars can get information about abuse complaints from [[API]] and reporters can go to one place. He hopes it will be new, improved [[DAAR]], non-binary, better, fairer, and more concerned with the persistence than the existence of abuse. | + | * [[Graeme Bunton]] presented on developments at the [[DNS Abuse Institute]], which is following the logic that there are two ways to reduce DNS abuse: |
| + | # prevent it or |
| + | # react to it. |
| + | Bunton explained that economic realities indicate that there should be more emphasis on reactive solutions because they don’t have to be integrated into current technology. He also discussed [[CART]], which will include domain look-up, who’s reporting, type of malware/spam, and required information so that registrars can get information about abuse complaints from [[API]] and reporters can go to one place. He hopes it will be new, improved [[DAAR]], non-binary, better, fairer, and more concerned with the persistence than the existence of abuse. |
| + | |
| ======RySG====== | | ======RySG====== |
| '''GeoTLD Group Community Session''' | | '''GeoTLD Group Community Session''' |