On 29 Aug 2002 at 9:31, Jon Lawrence wrote: Send reply to: dns§lists.auda.org.au Date sent: Thu, 29 Aug 2002 09:31:41 +0100 From: "Jon Lawrence" <jon§jonlawrence.com> To: dns§lists.auda.org.au Subject: Re: [DNS] domain news > Chris > > FYI - the auDA accredited registrar that is registered in Barbados is actually > physically based in Nepean, Ontario (near Ottawa I think). Which of course > begs the question - which aspect(s) of Canadian law are they avoiding? I didn't suggest that they are in any conflict with Canadian law. I don't think that for an Australian dealing with them the fact that they are physically located in Canada would be of much help. They would claim no doubt in the event that they were sued under Canadian law that they were in fact a Barbadian entity and not Ontarian and as such must be sued in the Barbadian legal system. I am sure that the souls who are physically in Canada are merely agents or contractors for the Barbadian entity and would be hard to pin down. Frankly that is why they have chosen to register in a tiny Carribian failed statelet rather than for want of a better word a more respectable jurisdiction. But I may be wrong. Which bring us to the point that I was trying to make earlier is that we are being forced to deal with, in the main, companies that in the ordinary course of business one might, if one was risk averse, not choose to deal with. The parent company of Ausregistry, RegistrarsAsia Pty Ltd, appears to have a paid up capital of $10.00 most of the shares being owned by someone whose address is given as Manly NSW. The registry company itself has a paid up capital of $1000. The company is owned by RegistrarsAsia Pty Ltd (92%) and Afilias Limited (8%). This latter is a privately held company registered in Ireland and is among other things the registry that runs .info but the saga with the .info sunrise situation and their CEO and the fact that Ireland is currently viewed as one of the most corrupt places in Europe to do business does not necessarily fill one with confidence. Looking at the website of RegistrarsAsia Pty Limited I find that that they are into all sorts of things: web site hosting and design being just two of them. Ausregistry and RegistrarsAsia have much in common - they share the same offices and the same 2 directors (one of whom owns no shares in either company). Where is the firewall between the operations of the two entities? How can there be one? It seems to me that most resellers at least are being forced to deal albeit at one remove with a registry that is to all intents and purposes a competitor. Frankly I do not care for Adrian Kinderis to be privy to my business when he is the General Manager and director of a competitor whist at the same time being the Managing Director of the registry. If I were to register some .au domain names on behalf of a client in a particular industry area how can I be confident that such information could not reach their competitors who might be the clients of RegistrarsAsia? I appreciate that there is a privacy policy in place but I am sure that Adrian would not claim that his brain or those of his staff are firewalled. I am not suggesting that any leakage has occured or will occur but there is a possibility of the perception of such a risk it seems to me. At the very least the two entities should be distinct, operate from separate premises and share no officers in common. It is most improper in my view that they should in regards to their officers be to the all intents and purposes the same entities. When one has occasion to contact Ausregistry one has to do so via a standard telephone number. There are no 1300 or 1800 facilities provided - a situation that seems to be unique for a registry company in a major economy. A reasonable person might suspect that this was perhaps indicative of a lack of capital. My experience is that the young people who answer the phone manage to be both insolent and truculent. Perhaps they are under pressure but the contrast with the staff at the previous registry is remarkable. The commonest solution they provide is for one to call auDA or talk to a registrar when in fact the issues appear to be with their systems. The company does not appear to have developed systems that cover reasonably predictable situations resulting in inconvenience and delay. I am personally not confident that if I were to lodge a complaint with auDA about a specific incident that there would not be ramifications for me or my clients. There seems to be a too close and personal relationship between RegistrarAsia/Ausregistry and auDA for comfort. For the example the officers of both organisations fly to ICANN conferences together - not a crime but not at arms length either. There does not appear to be any formal complaint system in place at auDA and there does not seem to be any protection for a complainant against being sued for libel and slander. One of the things that was held out to us was that the new system would work well and be transparent. At the moment I don't think anyone could say this. Am I alone in saying that I would be prefer to be dealing with a publicly listed entity or a co-op/mutual that would provide both the registry and registrar function (I can't see why they should be separate in Australia) and who was not essentially a competitor? cb Unlike most registries they are only open during quite limited hoursReceived on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.3.0 : Sat Sep 09 2017 - 22:00:06 UTC