In message <CAP-guGW00VMg53RqnQQ0fL9SBWbNmYi_bnWHu=wqoq0_vc_...@mail.gmail.com> William Herrin <[email protected]> wrote:
>On Thu, Jul 14, 2022 at 12:28 PM Matthew Petach <[email protected]> wrote: >> Justice must always be a "black box", to protect the innocent, >> until guilt is sufficiently demonstrated to warrant public action. >> Otherwise, lives and reputations are destroyed on nothing >> more than empty allegations from the aggrieved. :( > >You understand that's not how jurisprudence generally works, right? >Court cases and filings are almost always open to the public. Bill, we must be cognizant of, and sensitive to the fact that we here in the U.S. are somewhat spoiled when it comes to the transparency of our judicial processes, and in particular of our criminal judicial processes. In Europe, as I understand it (and largely but not entirely due to GDPR) they take a rather dramatically different approach, and keep everything under wraps, even *after* some slimebag has been duly and fairly convicted of multiple heinous, bloodthirsty, and premeditated murders. Even such individuals have an immediate right to be instantly "forgotten", under the law as it exists in much of Europe. (This affords untold millions of European citizens the absolute right to live next door to unidentified serial rapists and/or murderers while remaining totally oblivious to the sinister malevolence in their own neighborhoods, which is apparenly their preference.) Returning however to the question of ARIN and its adjudication of incoming reports of, shall we just say "fishy fact patterns", for me at least it is both reasonable and acceptable that ARIN should be allowed to investigate such matters -without- any uninvolved parties looking over their shoulders as they do so. Where I part company with John Curran is when we come to the question of what ARIN can or should reveal -after- ARIN has completed its internal reviews. As I have stated, it is my belief that both ARIN members and the Internet using public at large would be best served if ARIN would simply give a thumbs up / thumbs down at the end of any such review it performs. It can phrase these concluding pronouncements in the manner I have suggested, i.e. by simply saying that ARIN either will reclaim resources (and/or terminate a membership) or that it declines to do so at the present time. (It need not explain or elaborate in any way on any such decision.) I believe that ARIN can and should do this within one calendar month of its reciept of the original "fishiness" report. This, it seems to me, is neither difficult nor unreasonable. It would provide at least some transparency to an internal ARIN process which is at the moment quite entirely opaque, and for me at least, that would represent real progress. Regards, rfg _______________________________________________ ARIN-PPML You are receiving this message because you are subscribed to the ARIN Public Policy Mailing List ([email protected]). Unsubscribe or manage your mailing list subscription at: https://lists.arin.net/mailman/listinfo/arin-ppml Please contact [email protected] if you experience any issues.
