Most definitely not. The lock is decided upon by the registrar. ICANN/registry has nothing to do with it.
As per ICANN regulations:
Mandatory lock < 2016 > lock decided upon by registrar.
There is a common misconception that whenever you transfer or make an ownership change ICANN/registry will lock your domain. They don't, hence most registrars, unlike some with an archaic mo, will not.
Dynadot, Namecheap, GoDaddy, Namesilo, Namebright won't or have an opt out, just to name a few. (Some may have limitations after transfers actually).
Some have an internal locking procedure for pushes, aftermarket purchases and what else, but those are decided upon by the registrar you're using and hardly ever add up to 60 days of holding your domain hostage. Not taking into account caught domains obviously, as those will always come with a 60 day locking procedure by ICANN/registry as they're basically new registrations. (GTLDs that is, it is different with some new TLDS and ccTLDS).
Any registrar referring to ICANN for these kinds of locks could really do with some catching up... These policies have been in place for a while now. I expect my registrar to be aware of that as it's part of their job and what I'm paying them for.