Further to Mark Hughes' and Nick Andrew's comments (below), the point made by Robert Elz about stability of domain names in his submission to the Name Panel was addressed by the Panel and ultimately the auDA Board, although this may not be apparent. Elz point: "To achieve stability of domain names, no domain name was ever to be removed from a domain name holder (other than by operation of law) as long as the domain name holder continued to desire to retain the domain name." This point, together with other related issues such as claimed superior legal rights of trade mark over domain names, were addressed specifically and at length by the Panel, including in: - a submission to the Panel by SETEL (importance, revocation and security of tenure of domain name licences, <http://www.auda.org.au/policy/panel-name-2000/submissions/brown.html>) - a submission to the Panel by the ACCC (Registration of Products and Services and Application of Trademark Law, <http://www.auda.org.au/policy/panel-name-2000/submissions/accc.html>) - in Panel meeting discussions (no hierarchy of rights, <http://www.auda.org.au/policy/panel-name-2000/papers/27Marchminutes.html>) - in the Panel's Final Report (security of tenure over domain name licence <http://www.auda.org.au/docs/auda-name-eligibility-final.html#TOC3.8>) The Board accepted the Panel's recommendation that existing domain name licences should be 'grandfathered' from future policy changes, in order to provide existing registrants with security of tenure. This is consistent with past practice, for example when the restriction on generic domain names in com.au was introduced in 1996, registrants who had previously registered generic names were allowed to keep them. (Source: Jo Lim, auDA's Chief Policy Officer, 15 Aug 2001 posting to [DNS], <http://www.auda.org.au/list/dns/archive/082001/0014.html>.) There still remains a residual concern in my mind as to whether the issue of "security of tenure" has been adequately dealt with, but time will tell - particularly in the light of any decisions made under the new au Dispute Resolution Process (auDRP) and by the Courts. Ian -- Ian Johnston, Policy Consultant Small Enterprise Telecommunications Centre Limited (SETEL) http://www.setel.com.au mailto:ian.johnston§setel.com.au SETEL is a national small business consumer association Advancing and representing the interest of Australian small business as telecommunications and electronic commerce consumers -----Original Message----- From: Nick Andrew [mailto:lists-dns§nick-andrew.net] Sent: Saturday, 26 January 2002 8:16 AM To: dns§lists.auda.org.au Subject: Re: [DNS] Geographical Names On Sat, Jan 26, 2002 at 02:55:48AM +1100, Mark Hughes wrote: > I also note that grandfathering is strongly recommended by Robert Elz - as > you can see from his submission to the auDA name panel > (http://www.auda.org.au/policy/panel-name-2000/submissions/elz.html): > > "To achieve stability of domain names, no domain name was ever to be removed > from a domain name holder (other than by operation of law) as long as the > domain name holder continued to desire to retain the domain name." > > Now, my personal view is that I agree completely with Robert on this one - I > think he has it absolutely correct. Hear Hear ... /me too. IMHO, to do otherwise raises issues of privacy and security - for example, email intended for the previous registrant being delivered to the new registrant. (The domain name is the same, how is any sender to know that the person behind the domain name has changed?) Nick. -- --------------------------------------------------------------------------- List policy, unsubscribing and archives => http://www.auda.org.au/list/dns/ Please do not retransmit articles on this list without permission of the author, further information at the above URL. (330 subscribers.)Received on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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