I have raised this issue with auDA (early Feb) and below was the response to my enquiry about policy rules for companies registering an address that they claim to provide a service for. The 2 examples I gave were common in the public arena at the time and not necessarily reflective of my content tastes! My original enquiry related to http://www.mysearch.com.au/ owned by AnSearch ____________ From auDA: With regards to the allocation, they have stated that it is a service they provide and the service is a directory service. So if you type desperatehousewives.com.au into the browser, it does actually come up with a directory listing. Same with parishilton.com.au. ____________ So I suggest that the interpretation is that you can register a domain as a service of your business, if it provides a service of finding the content that you (user) are seeking. Cheers Marty -----Original Message----- From: AUDA LIST [mailto:auda206§bluedoor.com.au] Sent: Wednesday, 23 March 2005 7:23 PM To: dns§dotau.org Subject: Re: [DNS] Searcher twists name rules I must say I found this article quite interesting and somewhat concerning especially considering the new changes that are coming into effect. What I would like to know is how they managed to register the domains in the first place. Does this mean that anyone who runs a search engine has a close connection to the entire dictionary. Maybe we can all have a fit of "youthful exuberance". >> "They didn't go very well, so we are concentrating on generic names," he said << Perhaps they will concentrate on geographical names next, I am sure they qualify. Ian On Tuesday, March 22, 2005, at 09:34 AM, Deus Ex Machina wrote: > > http://australianit.news.com.au/articles/ > 0,7204,12618818%5E15306%5E%5Enbv%5E,00.html > > "Searcher twists name rules > > WOULD-BE search king Ansearch has ruffled a few feathers among > Australia's top corporate brands by registering misspellings of > well-known internet domain names in an attempt to drive traffic to the > search engine."Received on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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