| At Large Membership and Civil Society Participation in ICANN |
|
|
|
|
|
This discussion has been archived.
No new comments can be posted.
|
.nu Swept Away?
|
Log in/Create an Account
| Top
| 14 comments
|
Search Discussion
|
|
The Fine Print:
The following comments are owned by whoever posted them.
We are not responsible for them in any way.
|
|
 |
ccTLDs which has been orphaned by the country they were owned by should be deleted within a handful of years.
That's just the risk you take when you register a banana republic ccTLD domain name.
Furthermore: There should be a limit of the percentage of registrations under a ccTLD which originates outside that territory. Say max 10% of .nu registrations should be allowed to be made by and for entitities outside that territory. .nu asked for a ccTLD and used it as a gTLD. They had more registrations than citizens of their country. As I see it, that's misuse of a ccTLD.
|
|
|
[ Reply to This | Parent
]
|
|
Re:why should domain owners go away?
by Anonymous
|
|
|
 |
- Why should this limit be imposed? If a ccTLD/government wants foreign investment/participation, who is harmed by this?
- Who has the authority to impose your rule, and if they have that authority, then what other authority do they have?
- How do you tell where someone is really from?
- How do you enforce this rule if a ccTLD exceeds your quota?
|
|
|
[ Reply to This | Parent
]
|
| - 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
|

Privacy Policy: We will not knowingly give out your personal data -- other than identifying your postings in the way you direct by setting your configuration options -- without a court order. All logos and trademarks in this site are property of their
respective owner. The comments are property of their posters, all the rest © 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 by ICANNWatch.Org. This web site was made with Slashcode, a web portal system written in perl. Slashcode is Free Software released under the GNU/GPL license.
You can syndicate our headlines in .rdf, .rss, or .xml. Domain registration services donated by DomainRegistry.com
|