Melbourne IT completes Domainz purchase Melbourne IT today completed settlement of its AU$1.5 million purchase of New Zealand-based domain registrar Domainz. http://www.zdnet.com.au/newstech/enterprise/story/0,2000048640,20280944,00.htm The Domain Name Game It was easy to liken domain registrations in the 1990s to the California gold rush a century earlier. Folks would dig a little, stake their claim, and hope for the best. And some of the early birds who managed to register popular generic words like Business.com and Autos.com did walk away with millions. http://www.fool.com/News/mft/2003/mft03111105.htm Tech Summit to Tackle Net Issues Who controls the Internet and how richer nations should subsidize its growth in poorer countries are central issues dividing planners a month ahead of the first U.N. summit on information technology. http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,61155,00.html GNSO Council Teleconference Agenda - 20/11/03 http://gnso.icann.org/meetings/agenda-20nov03.shtml The UDRP: The Globalization of Trademark Rights by David Maher This article is a study of the conflict between different perspectives on the problem of trademarks as domain names on the internet. http://pws.prserv.net/davidmaher/UDRP%20Globalization%20of%20Trademark%20Rights.pdf Trademark Law on the Internet: Will It Scale? The Challenge to Develop International Trademark Law by David Maher The rapid growth of the Internet has had at least one unintended effect: a serious collision between the efficient functioning of the domain name system (DNS) and the claims of trademark owners. The architects of the DNS originally attempted to sidestep trademark issues (cf. RFC 1591), but the courts in the U.S. and other countries have clearly recognized that domain names can have trademark implications. In order to reduce or eliminate the conflicts, proposals have been made to change the DNS so that all domain names are meaningless, perhaps random combinations of letters and numbers (analogous to telephone numbers); other proposals call for the creation of new top-level domains. Moving to a DNS with meaningless word and number combinations would likely make all the trademark problems disappear, but this proposal seems to have almost no support. The proposals for creation of new top-level domains will alleviate some of the trademark problems that have already arisen, but there remain other problems that may be equally difficult to resolve. http://www.isoc.org/inet97/proceedings/B5/B5_3.HTM VeriSign's New Security Seal Too Trusting? On November 4, 2003, VeriSign announced a new "trust enhancing" seal which they built using Macromedia's Flash technology...While there are problems inherent to VeriSign's approach that call into question their understanding of "The Value of Trust," there are ways they could have made this particular implementation less trivially spoofable. The flaws I demonstrate on this page are flaws in the concept and the execution rather than anything inherently flawed in Flash. Overall this kind of graphical "trustmark" is extremely easy to forge just by recreating the artwork. But in this case, you don't even have to do that. The seal can still be called directly off the VeriSign servers, yet it is easily modified, without recreating artwork, and without doing anything untoward with VeriSign's servers! http://www.circleid.com/article/372_0_1_0_C Blacklisting Under Wrong Assumptions If you analyze the relay of spam- and malware-containing email circulating on the Internet purely through your mail server logs (running the Unix command "tail"), a large proportion seem to come from Asia Pacific hosts, especially those from mainland China. Therefore, many less-experienced systems administrators have simply blocked the access from subnets of Chinese or Asian origin, effectively destroying the fabric of the Internet -- messaging. If administrators took pains to analyze these supposedly Asian spam messages by analyzing the full Internet headers, they would have realized that the Asian servers were merely used by the real spammers as open relays, or perhaps as zombie hosts previously infected with the mass mailing worms through the exploitation of operating system vulnerabilities. http://www.circleid.com/article/371_0_1_0_C 1&1 Sees Jump in .co.uk Registrations Based on the latest figures for .co.uk domain registrations, 1&1 Internet is the United Kingdom’s number one Web host, the company said on Monday. According to the company, 1&1 registered 9,000 co.uk domains from October 21 to November 3, almost 700 more than the nearest competitor. The company also said it is the largest host in the world, based on Netcraft's latest Web server survey. http://thewhir.com/marketwatch/1and1111003.cfm +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Check out http://www.auda.org.au/about/news for the latest domain news. The domain name news is supported by auDA. Also see 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. Sources include Quicklinks (www.qlinks.net) and BNA Internet Law News (www.bna.com/ilaw)". ===== David Goldstein address: 2/4 Dundas Street COOGEE NSW 2034 AUSTRALIA email: Goldstein_David§yahoo.com.au phone: +61 418 228 605 - mobile; +61 2 9665 0015 - home http://personals.yahoo.com.au - Yahoo! Personals New people, new possibilities. FREE for a limited time.Received on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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