Members, James, the auction route is more troublesome than your line of thought. There can only be 'one' way forward. If the policy is changed to open up the 'com.au' register, then it should be the same as say 'trademarks' where the first person to request the registration is granted the right to proceed. The price should be the normal fee. The market will sort itself out post sale. I understand that Melbourne IT's records are sufficient to track request after they took over the formal management in Oct 96. Maybe records exist before then. I haven't check their position recently, however, I am aware of one large corporate who was declined a domain name registration in the early days of Melbourne IT's control on the basis of 'too generic' that plans to take legal action to pursue their claim if not awarded the right to now subsequently acquire as a result of the rule change. Who is going to pick up the legal tab on the auDA side? Will Melbourne IT be joined in any action? I am not a lawyer, but the auction concept looks ugly. Kerry Henry -----Original Message----- From: James Kane <bedylan§bigpond.com> To: dns§auda.org.au <dns§auda.org.au> Date: Monday, 5 March 2001 6:40 Subject: RE: [DNS] DNS and "end user" requirements (a little late)Received on Mon Mar 05 2001 - 16:34:14 UTC
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