Hi all As from last week, the au Domain Administration Ltd (auDA), who has the responsibility of operating the .au domain has commenced supporting my domain name news. For the latest domain news, please go to http://www.auda.org.au/about/news. Here you will find the latest domain name news, along with an archive of domain name news. Domain name news will be posted here prior to being posted on any of the lists I post the news to, so check it out if you want more recent news. Cheers David Canadian Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy Now In Force (reg req'd) After months of consultation, the Canadian Internet Registration Authority (CIRA) has just announced that the Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy for dot-ca domain names is now in force. This means that owners of Canadian trade-marks now have available to them a mechanism for disputing the registration of confusingly similar dot-ca domain names that is as quick and inexpensive as the mechanism under ICANN’s Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP) for disputing the registration of dot-com domain names. http://www.mondaq.com/article_preview.asp?a=17692&p=5&c=1634&e=on ICANN Delays .org Operator Selection The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) delayed its decision in the selection of a new operator for the .org domain registry. http://thewhir.com/marketwatch/ica090602.cfm Fifth Update on .org Reassignment Process This is an update on the status of the evaluation of the eleven applications ICANN received from entities seeking to become the registry operator for the .org top-level domain on 1 January 2003, when VeriSign, Inc. gives up that role. For more information, see the previous updates that were published on 25 July 2002, 4 August 2002, 21 August 2002, and 4 September 2002. http://www.icann.org/announcements/update-05sep02.htm http://www.icann.org/announcements/update-04sep02.htm ICANN serves breach notice on VeriSign ICANN have served a formal notice on registration giant VeriSign after they breached their Registrar accreditation agreement by failing to update false or incorrect WHOIS data. http://www.demys.net/news/02_sep_04_icann.htm 'Cyber-squatter' gets jump on Maori names A former Tainui executive who has snapped up potentially valuable names on the new internet suffix .maori.nz denies he is exacting utu or revenge. Craig Beecroft, sacked by Tainui but later acquitted in court of fraud allegations, said he had moved on from his dispute with his former employers. http://www.nzherald.co.nz/storydisplay.cfm?storyID=2497146&thesection=technology&thesubsection=general Teething troubles for .maori.nz Domainz temporarily suspended web registrations for .maori.nz names yesterday due to "technical difficulties" but by late afternoon the system appeared to be working again. http://www.idg.co.nz/webhome.nsf/UNID/08D7EA8C685FCAD9CC256C2B00089BF2!opendocument http://www.nzherald.co.nz/storydisplay.cfm?storyID=2447060 David & Goliath domain battle: reluctant David wins In a slightly bizarre WIPO decision over the domain goliath.biz, a battle of hardly-Biblical proportions has been resolved with the little guy winning - even though he wasn't up for a fight... http://www.demys.net/news/02_sep_06_goliath.htm VeriSign told to tidy records or lose domain biz The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) threatened to strip VeriSign of its ability to sell ".com" domain names if the registrar does not clean up inaccuracies in the public database that records who owns which websites. http://www.idg.co.nz/webhome.nsf/UNID/E8EA933DCE597C75CC256C2B0010E510!opendocument Appeals Court Upholds $65-Million Jury Award in Sex.com Domain Case A federal appeals court dismissed the appeal of a fugitive who lost a $65-million verdict last year over his theft of the lucrative Internet domain name www.sex.com. http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-sex4sep04.story Sex.com domain thief appeal denied The man found guilty of fraudulently obtaining the Sex.com domain name has had his appeal case thrown out. http://www.vnunet.com/News/1134863 http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,54962,00.html Forgot to renew your domain? Never mind, it did it itself This morning (and indeed yesterday morning) The Register received a nice email from our doppelgangers at Register.com, telling us our registration of theregister.ws is about to expire (on October 16th, something of a loose definition of 'about') and that it'd be renewed via the automatic renewal program on September 27th. The what? http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/27006.html Longest UDRP Case Ends Over Two Years Later (from UDRPlaw.net) The Stanley Works, makers of several well-known brands of tools, prevailed last week in the longest running UDRP case. National Arbitration Forum Panelist Charles K. McCotter, Jr. issued his decision two years and four months after the complaint was initially filed on April 27, 2000. McCotter ordered respondent McNeil & Associates to transfer four domain names to The Stanley Works. http://www.arbforum.com/domains/decisions/94671.htm California Attorney Wins Personal Name Challenge Under ACPA Provision (from UDRPlaw.net) California attorney Paul Wright became the second individual to succeed under the AntiCybersquatting Consumer Protection Act (ACPA) provision allowing for cyberpiracy protection for individuals. On August 28, 2002, US District Court Judge Joan Lefkow ruled that Domain Source had registered PaulWright.com in violation of 15 USC �1129. http://www.lextext.com/5109579_14.pdf VeriSign Embraces MasterCard System Online payment processor VeriSign Inc. has embraced an anti-fraud system that promises to decrease merchants' losses from stolen credit cards but could increase the checkout time for Internet shoppers. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A37589-2002Sep4.html Wrong Turn In Cyberspace: Using ICANN To Route Around The APA and the Constitution (2000) The Internet relies on an underlying centralized hierarchy built into the domain name system (DNS) to control the routing for the vast majority of Internet traffic. At its heart is a single data file, known as the "root." Control of the root provides singular power in cyberspace. This Article first describes how the United States government found itself in control of the root. It then describes how, in an attempt [*pg 18] to meet concerns that the United States could so dominate an Internet chokepoint, the U.S. Department of Commerce (DoC) summoned into being the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), a formally private nonprofit California corporation. DoC then signed contracts with ICANN in order to clothe it with most of the U.S. government's power over the DNS, and convinced other parties to recognize ICANN's authority. ICANN then took regulatory actions that the U.S. Department of Commerce was unable or unwilling to make itself, including the imposition on all registrants of Internet addresses of an idiosyncratic set of arbitration rules and procedures that benefit third-party trademark holders. Professor Froomkin then argues that the use of ICANN to regulate in the stead of an executive agency violates fundamental values and policies designed to ensure democratic control over the use of government power, and sets a precedent that risks being expanded into other regulatory activities. He argues that DoC's use of ICANN to make rules either violates the APA's requirement for notice and comment in rulemaking and judicial review, or it violates the Constitution's nondelegation doctrine. Professor Froomkin reviews possible alternatives to ICANN, and ultimately proposes a decentralized structure in which the namespace of the DNS is spread out over a transnational group of "policy partners" with DoC. http://www.law.duke.edu/shell/cite.pl?50+Duke+L.+J.+17 http://www.law.duke.edu/journals/dlj/articles/dlj50p17.htm ---------------- The Internet Law & Policy Forum’s annual conference, Security v. Privacy, is happening in Seattle, Washington, Wednesday and Thursday September 18-19 at the Bell Harbor Conference Center. To register, please visit http://www.ilpf.org/conference2002. Our dynamic and ever-growing conference lineup offers a host of compelling speakers plus a Special Briefing by Howard Schmidt, Vice Chairman of the President's Critical Infrastructure Protection Board on the newly announced National Strategy for Securing Cyberspace. (Read more about the initial announcement of this long-awaited plan at http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,3959,503728,00.asp .) Also speaking will be George Radwanski, Canada's Privacy Commissioner; Malcolm Crompton, Australia's Federal Privacy Commissioner; Gail Hamilton, EVP, Symantec; Richard Purcell, Corporate Privacy Officer, Microsoft'; and many others on substantive and timely topics. Conference-goers will benefit greatly from the host of peer conversations, formal presentations, those all-important meeting breaks, and a welcome reception, so please do join us for the most current thinking and international perspectives in Internet security, privacy, law and policy. If you register by Thursday, 12 September, you will receive $200 off the full registration fee — just enter CPN3 in the priority code/coupon code field. Sorry, this discount does not apply to our low government/academic/non-profit rate and can’t be used with other promotions. Hotel rooms are still available at the nearby Edgewater Hotel. Please contact ETI Travel at http://www.etitravel.com/ilpf.html to make a reservation ---------------- FORMATEX, a Spanish technological organization, in collaboration with the Computer Science and Physics Department of the University of Extremadura (Spain), is now editing a volume within our Information Society book series, on Techno-Legal aspects of Information Society. Some of the topics covered by this edition are: Security of Information Systems Networking E-commerce Networks and Liberties Informatic crimes Public security vs. secret communications Legal protection of sotware and digital contents Electronic signature Electronic means of payment Ethical issues Law and Computer Science Cryptography Legal Expert Systems Teleworking e-Government Cybersquatting, Typosquatting, etc Domain names and Trademarks Thesaurus and documental techniques Law Databases Law in Internet The Call for Papers' website is available at www.formatex.org/isbook/callforpaper.htm with details on deadlines, manuscripts format, etc. Deadline for articles submission is November 25th for this volume. If you and/or your team is interested in contributing to this volume, please contact us at formatex§formatex.org or directly to the editor-in-chief A.Mendez-Vilas, which can be reached at: Departamento de Fisica Universidad de Extremadura Avda. de Elvas s/n 06071 Badajoz Spain amvilas§unex.es and provide us an abstract and a tentative title as soon as possible, along with the list of authors and afilliations. A list of received/accepted proposals is being posted at the Call for Papers' website (Preliminary Content section). Please do not hesitate to contact us for any inquiry or suggestion. Regards, J.A.Mesa Gonzalez FORMATEX Secretariat Phone/Fax: +34 924 258 615 E-mail: isbook2002§formatex.org +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Check out http://www.auda.org.au/about/news for the latest domain news, or http://greta.electric.gen.nz/mailman/listinfo/internet-news or http://www.alfa-redi.org/noticia for an archive or to subscribe to the general news. ===== David Goldstein email: Goldstein_David§yahoo.com.au phone: +61 418 228 605 - mobile; +61 2 9665 0015 - home http://mobile.yahoo.com.au - Yahoo! Messenger for SMS - Now send & receive IMs on your mobile via SMSReceived on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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