The whois guard solution seems workable where the registrar just forwards 
information.
It would be nice if there were corporate phone numbers as GDPR doesn't apply to 
corporations.
For routing whois information there aren't going to be many individuals and it 
would seem
that the corporations who employee individuals should be the ones protecting 
those individuals
work emails by providing a generic contact email forward.  Which is good 
practice anyway
since people leave and go on vacation and problems still happen.
And the routing whois information is a lot more relevant to most of us here.
Of course anyone posting to a public list should be aware that their email 
address is
part of that information.  Which is particularly relevant to this list.

Mack

-----Original Message-----
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-boun...@nanog.org] On Behalf Of William Herrin
Sent: Friday, June 01, 2018 9:24 AM
To: l...@satchell.net
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Subject: Re: ICANN GDPR lawsuit

On Fri, Jun 1, 2018 at 8:47 AM, Stephen Satchell <l...@satchell.net> wrote:
> In other words, how do you do your job in light of the GDPR 
> restrictions on accessing contact information for other network operators?
>
> Please be specific.  A lot of NOC policies and procedures will need to 
> be updated.

Publish role accounts in whois instead of personal information?

Sorry, I don't mean to break up an energetic tirade but a phone number is not 
PII when it's attached to "hostmaster" instead of "John Doe".
You and I like knowing that there's a specific person there and it certainly 
helps when auditing public policy compliance but as a technical matter contact 
doesn't have to work that way.

I noticed that Namecheap solved their GDPR problem by simply making their 
"WhoisGuard" product free.

Regards,
Bill Herrin


--
William Herrin ................ her...@dirtside.com  b...@herrin.us Dirtside 
Systems ......... Web: <http://www.dirtside.com/>
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