ICANN Sued Over Wait List 24
Greedo writes "According to their press release, "Pool.com, one of the Internet's hottest new ventures (their words, not mine), has launched a lawsuit challenging the right of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) to proceed with a monopolistic new Wait-Listing Service (Google cache) this fall." You can read Pool.com's Statement of Claim, if you like."
Thank God! (Score:1)
ICANN needs to be slapped, and slapped hard, and NOT with an open palm. I don't know anything about Pool, but I'm hoping that they have a big enough fist, or good enough lawyers (which are effectively the same thing) to send ICANN's head spinning.
broken link (Score:2, Informative)
IANAL but... (Score:1)
I realize this is a big kick in the pants for pool.com, I don't see that they have much of a case here. They should consider themselves lucky that only one reservation can be put on one domain name.
Re:IANAL but... (Score:1)
The way Verisign..excuse me ICANN (little difference) wants it, only Verisign can reserve domain names. Other companies can resell Verisign's reservation system for "only" $24-$28/year.
This matches Verisign's past work, basically killing, neutering and then buying (essentially) ICANN so they remained the one source for
Basically (Score:5, Informative)
Waving around the word "monopolistic" seems a bit silly here -- like with broadcast spectrum allocation, this is a case where you need a central authority. Whether or not you like ICANN and whether or not a waiting-list is better than a free-for-all, there doesn't seem to be anything at issue here except Pool.com's business model.
(Incidentally, pool.com is the sort of sweet domain that got swept up in the '90's and become available again now. Apparently their system works.)
Re:Basically (Score:2)
The reason the word "monopolistic" is exactly correct is that Verisign themselves will be collecting $24-$28/year from the other registrars to provide this service. It's not like ICANN, or a non-profit, is getting the fee to run this database "for the greater good".
But as we all know (or we all should know) ICANN is firmly in
Monopoly favors existing players (Score:2)
If I'm not mistaken, the "reservation" system is explicitly handed to one company. There are other models that would work, pool.com's being one of them. ICANN, in typical fashion, handed out a freebie to an incumbent.
And you're actually factually incorrect: the reason ICANN has the power it has is that people who choose to participate in the distri
Dips on Microsoft.com (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Dips on Microsoft.com (Score:1)
SuDZ
They will still have a business model (Score:1)
We could call it meta-squatting!
Call me a counter-counter-culturist, but (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm tired of domain name issues (Score:3, Insightful)
It was, of course, unfair for Network Solutions to reap such large profits from a service that cost them little to opeate. But it would have made more sense to divert this money into Internet operations or research. Cutting the fees has just enabled wholesale domain squatting and the strange business of grabbing popular names for porn sites.
What the heck. I think it's time to stop trying to "fix" the domain system and think of it as a set of arbitrary addresses. For actually finding the web site you want, we need some kind of keyword system and/or a central registry of people and organization that own domain names.
Re:I'm tired of domain name issues (Score:1)
Isn't this what a search engine is, really? In essence its a phone book of web pages which you can sort by keyword. Google currently seems to have the best algorithm to sort those keywords.
Just my $.02
Re:I'm tired of domain name issues (Score:2)
You may be tired, but... (Score:2)
Don't talk about "need" - I don't need the 15 or so domains I own (I'm not even sure how many at this point). I have them. That's what counts.
Trademarks are not addresses (Score:2)
Another difference: to grab a domain name, all you have to do is pay the registration fee. To grab a trademark, you have to identify the mark with something of potential value: a product, a se
Don't be dense (Score:2)
Read it again, think a bit, and drive through.
Ahem.
I'm not dense, you are! (Score:2)
irrelevant lawsuit? (Score:1)
Sounds Like ICAAN is going to get it's ass kicked (Score:1)
Their busi