Congressional Comittee Mulls WHOIS Data Integrity 20
Alien54 writes: "The US Congress Subcommittee on Courts, the Internet, and Intellectual Property is holding a hearing today on "The Accuracy and Integrity of the WHOIS DATABASE." This is specifically on HR 4640, "To provide criminal penalties for providing false information in registering a domain name on the Internet." - -
You can hear live audio of the hearing here on the weekly schedule page (NB windows media). Strangely, this had passed throught hands of the House Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security
which is involved in a number of things on interest to Slashdot readers." (Visit Thomas and type in "HR 4640" in the query box to read more on this bill.)
I refuse. (Score:2)
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Re:I refuse. (Score:2)
Any bets we'll have Bill's number for microsoft.com? Or even a 24 hour number?
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Re:I refuse. (Score:2)
The current language allows the courts to interpret "intent to defraud" any way they like. If this bill passes, I guarantee you that the first prosecutor to land a case in court will be claiming that entering false information is intent to defraud. And if I were the courts, I'd buy it. After all, when you type the fake information in, you know it's fake and you're doing it intentionally, presumably to prevent others from knowing who really owns the domain.
IANAL, nor am I the courts. Nor do I like this bill. I own a lot of domains and I don't want my full name and address available to the general public anywhere, much less in the WHOIS database.
Shaun
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Here we go again... (Score:1)
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How about the WWW or Linux (Score:2)
Maybe YOU don't care for the WWW or for Linux, but both have brought "most U.S. users" more "gain" than "pain."
I won't mod you down - I feel the need to call you a twit explicitly, rather than by implication.
-Isaac
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Re:How about the WWW or Linux (Score:2)
You're right! I'm sure AOL would have come up with something nice for us. Or maybe Compuserve. Of course, you can pretty much forget about creating your own content under those systems, but who wants that ability?
Sorry, not on the same scale - not even the same order of magnitude. Fidonet didn't work *that* well.
-Isaac
Re:Here we go again... (Score:2)
So now the ball's in your court to get people in YOUR country to not provide false information, oh, but wait, no one from your country EVER does anything unethical do they?
Re:Here we go again... (Score:1)
that's easy to do. however, we're talking about politicians here. by definition (in the U.S. at least) that means 'no brains'.
the American definition of politician
politician = "person who thinks he has the RIGHT to suck at the public tit his whole life while justifying that "I'm just representing my con-stit-chew-ents. I feel their pain when being taxed. after all, I AM a compassionate conservative" "
look at Bush Jr. a COMPLETE failure in business, always gettin' bailed out by daddies oil buddies until they got tired of it and made him invest in the Texas Rangers when it was up for sale. boy howdy! i'd sure like to make $700,000 turn into over $14 million! then he ran for gub'ner and the rest is (shameful) history.
thank god I never voted for that moron. I can hold my head high. can you?
Who controls WHOIS? (Score:2)
Already the case in the UK... (Score:2)
Names within .ltd and .plc have to match names of companies registered at Companies House in the UK. Apart from the laws against misrepresentation quoted on the page linked to above, companies are bound by law to register the home addresses of directors, and you can get this information from Companies House (not as easy as WHOIS, but its there).
I'd like large chunks of the net to stay anonymous and all that, but equally I'd like it if more of the net was like this - you can actually determine who you're dealing with 'in meatspace' because the registrar has the law on his side.
Technically, SSL certificates are supposed to help with this whole trust issue (which is what it boils down to - businesses have to earn trust to make sales) - but the CAs themselves are not trustworthy [slashdot.org]. How much for a certificate issued by the Consumer Association [which.net] or Greenpeace [greenpeace.org]?