On 3 Dec 2003 at 13:47, Bruce Tonkin wrote: > > Actually there is a complaints handling policy for such situations. > > See: > http://www.auda.org.au/docs/auda-2002-25.txt > > In particular note the following: > > "3.1 Where a person believes that a registrant is not eligible to > hold their domain > name licence, that person should contact the registrar of record for the > domain name > (disclosed on the WHOIS service). > > 3.2 On receipt of a complaint about the eligibility of a registrant, > the registrar > must reconfirm the eligibility details of the registrant (for example, > check that the > registrant's business name registration is still current). If the > eligibility details > are current, the registrar is not required to take any further action. > > 3.3 If the eligibility details are not current, the registrar must > contact the > registrant to request that they update their eligibility details within > 14 calendar > days. The registrar must use reasonable commercial endeavours to contact > the registrant > (for example, if an email bounces, the registrar should attempt to > contact the registrant > by phone or fax)." > Bruce These rules are honoured only in the breach. Registrars of record frequently allow registrants much more than 14 days to put things right. In some cases I have run with RMIT the 14 days only started from the moment your legal dept. decided to send a query to the registrant contact at which point the the domain was transferred to another registrar which started the clock ticking again. I have had a registrar refuse to do anything about a bodgie registration. In another case auDA (being the registrar of record) allowed a registrant around 3 months to regularise a .net.au registration. Additionally there is no obligation on the registrar to advise the complainant of the outcome of their investigations. cbReceived on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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