|> -----Original Message----- |> From: Bruce Tonkin [mailto:Bruce.Tonkin§melbourneit.com.au] |> Sent: Friday, May 03, 2002 4:37 PM |> To: 'dns§lists.auda.org.au' |> Subject: [DNS] Software maintenance licences |> <snip> |> Registrars will try to differentiate themselves by providing different |> levels of service. |> The service agreement is the domain name licence. <snip> Disagree and this type of lumping together of different services under a domain name licence needs to be discouraged with regards to the terminology used. Yes, Registrars and resellers offer different *additional* services with their domain name registrations but they are not actually a part of the domain registration. They are *addon* services and actually have no bearing on the domain name registration. There should not be any legal linkage between the initial domain name registration and the additional services. Service agreements may contain references to both the domain name registration and the additional services provided but bodies like AuDA should not be influenced by any additional services provided and confine themselves to elements under their Charter only, with respect to the development of any policies and procedures. Nor should AuDA and other bodies endorse any practices where a domain name registration is not an individual aspect of any transaction. What I'm talking about here is a practice of resellers and Registrars, not giving the domain name registrant full possession of the registration but retaining ownership over the domain name to control the user in their hosting and other service preferences. A practice I personally deplore. Darryl (Dassa) Lynch.Received on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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