Internet Name Body Set for Landmark Vote This Week The organization that oversees the Internet's vast domain-name system is looking to face down grass-roots protesters at its annual meeting in Bucharest this week as it tries to gain greater government-level acceptance. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A40653-2002Jun25.html Regional Internet Registries' Submission to the Committee on ICANN Evolution and Reform The Regional Internet Registries (RIRs) jointly undertake the role of management of IP number resources through the allocation of IP number resources to network operators and Local Internet Registries. This managerial role is in support of the ultimate requirement within the Internet to associate network resources with numbers drawn from the relevant public Internet number space. http://www.ripe.net/ripencc/about/regional/rir-icann-statement-20020620.html Competition Is Heating Up for Control of .org Domain An intense, largely behind-the-scenes competition is under way for the right to manage the global database that keeps track of Internet addresses of noncommercial organizations. http://www.nytimes.com/2002/06/15/technology/15NET.html S.African Internet boss hides domain key abroad The administrator of South Africa's web addresses said on Thursday he had hidden the key to the country's ``.ZA'' domain network abroad to prevent any government interference in access to the Internet. http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/news/editorial/3463007.htm Nominet changes tackle cybersquatting Nominet, the non-profit organisation that manages the .uk domain name registry, is planning changes to make the tracking down of cybersquatters easier. http://www.vnunet.com/News/1132525 COURT RULES DOT-TV DOMAIN AUCTION BINDING (BNA Internet Law News) A California appellate court has ruled in favor of a Korean man who won an auction conducted by the dot-tv registrar for the golf.tv domain. Dot-tv tried to get out of the deal by arguing that its acknowledgement of the winning $1000 bid was an error, but the court held that a valid contract was formed. Decision at http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov/opinions/documents/B151987.PDF MULTIPLE PERSONALITY DOMAIN NAME HOLDER LOSES DISPUTE (BNA Internet Law News) Nominet, the dot-uk administrator, has issued its first decision involving the new .me.uk domain, which is intended for use by individuals. The case involved a person who claimed that his nickname was Nokia. The panelist wasn't buying, however, noting that it was unlikely that the same person had nicknames such as Vodafone, Orange, Virgin, BMW, Nissan, and Sony, all of which had been registered in his name. Coverage at http://www.demys.net/news/02_jun_24_nokia.htm Decision at http://www.nominet.net/drs/decisions/nokia-v-jawad.html NAF RELEASES FIRST RDRP DECISION (BNA Internet Law News) A U.S. bank has become the first successful complainant under the dot-biz Restrictions Dispute Resolution Policy (RDRP) in a case that combines both the RDRP and UDRP. US Bancorp has obtained the transfer of US-Bank.biz and US-Bank.info, despite claims by the registrant that the sites were to be used for customer complaints. Decision at http://www.arbforum.com/domains/decisions/106124.htm REPORT PANS ICANN RECONSIDERATION POLICY (BNA Internet Law News) A new report from the Center for Information Technology at the University of Massachusetts has reviewed the ICANN Reconsideration Policy in light of claims by ICANN CEO M. Stuart Lynn that precious board and staff time have been devoted to largely frivilous requests. The report finds that there is no evidence of frivolous requests and that ICANN has been rather slow in its response. Though a response is promised within 30 days, it is more likely to take six months than 30 days. Of the 26 requests on which it has ruled, only one resulted in a favorable recommendation to the board. Study at <http://www.ombuds.org/reconsideration/> REPORT FROM BUCHAREST ON ICANN MEETING (BNA Internet Law News) With published media sources a day behind in providing coverage of the ICANN meeting in Bucharest, web postings offer more updated, individual perspectives. Tim Denton and Michael Palage both offer coverage of the Registrars meeting, while Alexander Svensson and Jamie Love provide their perspectives on the General Assembly meeting. http://www.dnso.org/clubpublic/ga/Arc10/msg02483.html http://www.dnso.org/clubpublic/ga/Arc10/msg02481.html http://www.dnso.org/clubpublic/ga/Arc10/msg02482.html http://www.dnso.org/clubpublic/registrars/Arc01/msg02629.html http://www.dnso.org/clubpublic/registrars/Arc01/msg02628.html DOT-BIZ NOT GENERATING MUCH BUSINESS (BNA Internet Law News) A new study from Harvard's Jonathan Zittrain and Ben Edelman provides insight into the current state of dot-biz. The study finds that at least 74% of currently registered dot-biz domains provide no web content or provide only error messages or placeholders, while about 25% of dot-biz registrations are registered to the same organization holding the dot-com. Study at <http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/tlds/001/> The following comes from The Filter... (with those bloody stupid 'make a shorter link' which don't always work!) * ICANN, Heal Thyself: Last week the increasingly beleaguered Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) posted its self-made remedy for the domain name body's ills: "ICANN: A Blueprint for Reform." The proposal was poorly received by ICANN critics and by members of Congress, four of whom penned a letter to the Department of Commerce stating that ICANN "lacks the legitimacy needed to guide an international consensus body." The four--congressmen "Billy" Tauzin (R-La.), John Dingell (D-Mich.), Fred Upton (R-Mich.) and Edward Markey (D-Mass.)--recommended that the DoC "should only authorize a short-term renewal of the MoU [memorandum of understanding] unless and until ICANN can show that reforms, necessary to limit its authority and provide for accountability and transparency, have been implemented." Translation: If critics in Congress aren't satisfied with ICANN's reformation, its license to operate--the DoC MoU, set to expire September 30, 2002--may be in jeopardy. This week, ICANN goes under the knife in Bucharest, Romania, where the organization is holding public meetings and plans to vote, Thursday, on its "Blueprint" reform proposal. Is ICANN President M. Stuart Lynn concerned that the proposal will fail to satisfy critics? Not according to a recent article in the Washington Post, in which Lynn opines that the reform proposal is "very much in line with what the congressmen are seeking." <http://makeashorterlink.com/?I1D055221> [ICANN] <http://www.icannwatch.org/article.php?sid=821> <http://makeashorterlink.com/?E27D25121> [Washington Post] <http://makeashorterlink.com/?C28D51121> [Washington Post] <http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,53410,00.html> How are the Bucharest meetings going so far? Follow the links below to tune in to the webcast, read running commentary on the proceedings on weblogs by Bret Fausett and Robert Shaw, and check out email discussion by James Love, Hans Klein and others: <http://videolab.uoregon.edu/events/ICANN/icann_bucharest.html> <http://icann.blog.us/categories/bucharest/> [Bret Fausett] <http://radio.weblogs.com/0108486/> [Robert Shaw] <http://www.icann-ncc.org/pipermail/discuss/2002-June/date.html> * Getting Down to .BIZness: Amid continuing discussion and criticism of ICANN's proposed restructuring, Berkman Center researchers have begun to examine ICANN's efforts to carry out what is arguably its most critical mission: introducing new top-level domains (TLDs) to the domain name system and thereby helping to foster competition in the domain name registration business. This past November marked the long-awaited introduction of the new top-level domain .BIZ--namespace designated for "companies large and small, around the world." So how goes the nascent .BIZ business? Berkman Center Faculty Co-Director Jonathan Zittrain and Berkman Affiliate Ben Edelman set out to find some answers, and have posted the results--"Survey of Usage of the .BIZ TLD"--online. Among the findings: three quarters of currently registered .BIZ domains provide no web content or provide only error messages or placeholders; a quarter of .BIZ registrations are registered to the same organization that registered the corresponding .COM; and many .BIZ names fail to comply with .BIZ registry anti-warehousing policies. "For a number of people and companies, a lot rides on ICANN's decisions about new top-level domains," says Zittrain. "Our hope is to flesh out prima facie assumptions with data about what's really going on--given the fact that one benefit of domain names as digital creatures is that data about them can be gathered and analyzed with the same tools people employ to navigate the Net using the names themselves." Check out the URLs below for the study itself and the ongoing discussion at ICANNWatch.org: <http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/tlds/001/> <http://www.icannwatch.org/article.php?sid=826> * What's In a .NAME?: .BIZ isn't the only new TLD in town--ICANN also introduced .NAME. Follow the links below for Edelman's study of .NAME registrations, plus press coverage by the Washington Post. <http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/edelman/name-restrictions/> <http://makeashorterlink.com/?M13E12321> [Washington Post] ===== David Goldstein email: Goldstein_David§yahoo.com.au phone: +49 1505 524 5640 (temporary while in Germany) SMS: to send me free web SMS, go to http://www2.quam.de/sms/ http://www.sold.com.au - SOLD.com.au - Find yourself a bargain!Received on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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