[Chapter-delegates] Internet Society Appointments to theNTIA/IANA Stewardship Transition Coordination Group
Suhas SG
jargnar at gmail.com
Tue Jul 8 20:12:38 PDT 2014
>
> The Internet Society (ISOC) appoints Narelle Clark, Director of
> Operations- Deputy CEO for the Australian Communications Consumer Action
> Network (ACCAN) and Dr. Demi Getschko, CEO of the Brazilian Network
> Information Center (NIC.br), as the ISOC representatives on the NTIA/IANA
> Stewardship Transition Coordination Group.
Congratulations to Narelle Clark & Dr. Demi Getschko.
Best Regards,
Suhas
Internet Society India Bangalore Chapter
On Tue, Jul 8, 2014 at 6:43 PM, Richard Hill <rhill at hill-a.ch> wrote:
> Please see embedded comments below
>
> Thanks and best,
> Richard
>
> ----- Original Message ----- From: Demi Getschko
>> To: Chapter Delegates
>> Sent: Tuesday, July 08, 2014 1:58 AM
>>
>> Subject: Re: [Chapter-delegates] Internet Society Appointments to
>> theNTIA/IANA >Stewardship Transition Coordination Group
>>
>> SNIP
>
>
>
> 2- In the off-line world, could a owner of a building hide his/her name
>> as a real owner
>> of that house?
>>
>
> In some jurisdictions yes, because the building can be owned by the
> equivalent of a limited liability company (Inc. in the US) which can be
> privately owned (stocks not publicly traded) so the name of the stock
> owners are not public. But of course the legal representative of the
> company must be made public.
>
>
> Or a owner of a business?
>>
>
> Same as above.
>
>
> Or a publisher of a written paper?
>>
>
> Sure. Anonymity and/or publishing under a pseudonym, are permitted in many
> jurisdictions.
>
>
> 3- When two people get legally married, could them hide this very fact
>> from the rest
>> of the society?
>>
>
> In most jurisdictions, no.
>
>
>
> I am not trying to make a strong parallel between these situations and
>> the fact that one
>> holds a domain name but where his/her privacy rights begins to apply?
>> Could I have
>> a domain name, and its correspondent site, with contents, transactions,
>> possibility of harm others ecc, and yet keep my identity (or, at least, a
>> way to be
>> contacted) hidden?
>>
>
> That is a question that can (and has been, and will continue to be)
> debated.
>
> In most jurisdictions, you can request that your name not be publicly
> listed in the telephone directory. But of course the telephone company
> does know which name is associated with which telephone number and can be
> compelled to disclose it through some formal process, which may involve a
> court order.
>
> Maybe that is a useful analogy (or maybe not).
>
> SNIP
>
>
>
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>
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