This is a bit weird, but after thinking about it, to use another example, ansearch.com.au is the name of a company / search engine, which IS their product. Parishilton.com.au on the other hand ISNT the name of their search engine, even if they do provide search results for parishilton, so they aren't eligible for that one by the below rules. Likewise google is the name of a product as well as the company, which is a search engine product, so relates 100% to their domain name. spacely-sprockets.com.au however, would not relate directly to google even if it was listed in googles directory. But I agree, in trying to cut down on domain camping, it looks like the wording gone nutty and overboard. <Auda Bash> b) the domain name must not be an entity name, personal name or brand name in existence at the time the domain name was registered. Which basically means in order to be eligible for a domain name, you have to be ineligible? WTF? </Auda Bash> Have we missed something? -Sean. 4.2: <snip> 4.2 In addition to their obligations under auDA Published Policies and the Registrant Agreement (domain name licence), domainers must comply with the following conditions of use: a) the content on a monetised website must be related specifically and predominantly to the domain name; and b) the domain name must not be an entity name, personal name or brand name in existence at the time the domain name was registered. </snip> - a literal reading of the above would lead one to conclude that the registration of google.com.au would breach this clarification/policy as it meets all the conditions of 2.1 but breaches both 4.2 (a) and (b). I'm sure that is not the intention of the authors, but it does highlight the complete absurdity of this clarification/policy. Which brings me to my primary point, which is that it is clearly outside of auDA's remit to make any judgement about whether a domain name registration should be permitted on the basis of the (a) intended use and (b) content of any website associated with that domain name, except where proscribed by state or federal legislation (racist or other offensive terms, use of the term "bank" etc etc). Also, I'd like to hear how the intent of a registration can be determined? For bad faith registrations (eg cybersquatting, typosquatting etc) there are already proven and cost-effective mechanisms in place. For anything else, registrants, as long as they meet the eligibility criteria, should be able to register whatever domain names they want. Jon -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://lists.cynosure.com.au/mailman/private/dns/attachments/20060721/4c68dab7/attachment.htmReceived on Thu Jul 20 2006 - 22:07:08 UTC
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