Network Solutions Sued for Cyber-Squatting 6
IRNI writes "TechTV News has an article about hoarded domain names. A man is bringing a class action lawsuit against Network Solutions claiming that they will not release leagally expired domain names. I know this to be true. One of my domains expired on the 6th and is still not available for the public to use." As far as I know, Network Solutions hasn't released any domain names that have expired in the last six months or more.
Release of domain name (Score:1)
NSI [networksolutions.com] *has* released one I know of. I client of mine lost www.esni.com [esni.com]due to non-payment. The only problem was not receiving a bill. Not the 2 emails nor the paper bill that NSI says it sent.
I know of one other name/site I host that had the same problem but since he has only one (and not a ton going to the same site). Nobody would have wanted this name anyway since it has 18 characters vs. 4.
I called Mike (the once and maybe future owner of esni.com) to tell him that he wasn't recruiting anymore but that he was selling viagra for $6 bucks a pill from Korea to other Americans without a perscription. And the name has not one thing to do with the drug seller's name or business.
Truth be told, IBI registered this, not NSI (one of the new registrars). But that means NSI released it. And within a few weeks of the supposed billing. Hopefully, Mike will pursue it since it is the acronym of his company and the new corporate imagery is based on it. NSI offered to and then transfered me to what amounts to their legal office when I called about the name and no bills since obviously there was a problem. Hopefully, he'll get it back.
4 character are hard to come by.
difficult (Score:1)
Back-taxes (Score:2)
Why don't they just release the names back to the public, with the caveat that the next owner must pay-off whatever delinquent balance is outstanding on the domain? I mean, at $35/yr, you're not going to be able to run up that big a tab before getting your domain yanked from you
Recoup loesses? (Score:3)
Re:Decentralization (Score:4)
Anyway, thats one idea, but there are lots more ideas. We should have compeating top level domains to try these things out.
Decentralization (Score:4)
The more I hear about domain name-related problems like this, the more I'm convinced that a single database of "official" domain names is just a bad idea. Several people on /. have suggested a scheme of competing domain name databases, with users choosing which service they wish to subscribe to. (Sorry about the grammar.)
Network Solutions is either (a) purposely overstepping their bounds here, or (b) incompetent. Whichever the case, the problem would be solved by competing databases; people could simply avoid using Network Solutions's db.
Of course, you can make your own "database" by simply editing your /etc/hosts file, but I think it would quickly become unwieldy. Unless you write a utility to manage it...
Well. I guess I know what I'm doing this weekend.