auDA has given notice of an Extraordinary Meeting on August 13 to consider constitutional amendments to forbid a "supply related person" from being elected a director of demand class; and preventing multiple divisions within the same corporate group from having multiple memberships. Presumably this is a measure to try and guard against the possibility of unfairly unbalancing auDA's board by stacking it full of supply-side representatives, however is the mechanism the right one? It seems to disenfranchise legitimate community members who may be indirectly connected with the domain name retailing business from participating as users. To take a personal example, when I started participating in auDA -- which I did out of personal interest -- my employer at the time was an ISP where I worked in systems development. In this role I didn't touch domain retailing services (back then as a reseller of M-IT) for customers. Today under these rules presumably I would be banned from being on the auDA Board. Is that fair or appropriate? If you look at other kinds of organisations it is possible to serve in a personal capacity, as well as have an organisation participate also. Taking ISOC-AU as an example, I'd imagine a number of employees of their corporate members are members in their own right. Perhaps we need to reconsider different models of demand membership of auDA if the risk of capture is that great. I don't know what the current update of demand membership is like, but it might benefit from some elements of the new CIRA model (see http://www.cira.ca/en/membership/about.html) where any domain holder can have free annual enrollment as a member. kimReceived on Wed Jul 18 2007 - 18:46:12 UTC
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