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    .US Registry Deleting Domain Names Retroactively!! | Log in/Create an Account | Top | 41 comments | Search Discussion
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    Re: .US Registry Deleting Domain Names Retroactive
    by fnord ({groy2k} {at} {yahoo.com}) on Thursday August 15 2002, @07:29AM (#8501)
    User #2810 Info
    It seems likely the policy was encouraged by the government, from the link given above to .us policy, it states in part:
    We regret this late notice, but this policy has been developed in direct consultation with the U.S. Department of Commerce in a very short timeframe.
    While it was short notice, registrants were (or reasonably should have been) aware that they could subsequently lose their domain names. I do think this is even wonkier and less fair than NetSol's former practice of pre-screening out all such strings. -g
    [ Reply to This | Parent ]
    Re: Public Confusion About TLDs Won't Solve Anyth
    by michael (froomkin@lawUNSPAM.tm) on Thursday August 15 2002, @05:42AM (#8495)
    User #4 Info | http://www.discourse.net/
    I would not release many "within a short period of time". I'd set up a clear and predictable schedule for new ones coming on stream. Say, one a month for the foreseeable future. People would quickly be trained to expect new TLDs. More importantly the speculative value would drop to near zero, cutting cybersquatting.

    I think it's likely that some registry somewhere will fail someday. That's why good data escrow is one of the ICANN rules I support, and why I'm so puzzled it hasn't been put into practice. It seems almost certain to me that were a registry to go under, its client base would be an asset that other registries would want to buy, so the odds are good that clients would not be harmed at all.

    [ Reply to This | Parent ]
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