Private .US Registrations Disallowed by NTIA 370
jnetsurfer writes "Apparently, the National Telecommunications and Information Administration ("NTIA") has decided that domains under the TLD .US have no right to privacy. New domain names ending in .US will not be able to be registered as "private" and current owners of .US names will be forced to reveal their contact information starting "no later than January 26, 2006". This means that you can't run an annonymous website with a .US TLD. If you don't like this, feel free to sign the petition."
I'd sign the petition... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I'd sign the petition... (Score:2, Insightful)
I.e. Your right to freedom of expression is cool as long as you don't express yourself by shutting up other people.
Likewise, an anonymously registered and maintained TLD is useful for only a few things. Most of them wrong. I.e. you can knowingly publish libelous material as long as nobody knows it was put out by you.
Worse yet, you can register a domain, which suggests you are somebody else and then put out information damaging to that person. I.e. r_kelly.us
Re:I'd sign the petition... (Score:5, Insightful)
There are plenty of ignorant people out there who can only react to differing opinions, beliefs or behavior with threats and violence. I run a very popular niche goth site and, while I'm not exactly goth myself, there are a lot of people out there who react to things like the school shooting this month by making threats to anyone they can find that fits whatever their own perverted (media-given) impression of a "goth" or "punk" is.
Or, perhaps, a woman running an abortion rights action site who would like to keep her information private. Last thing you want to be is in the crosshairs of some religious nut who believes god is directing him or her to save the fetuses by blowing your brains out.
There are any number of valid reasons to want to maintain some sort of privacy to keep the freaks and nutcases from tracking you down. The most violent thing I've ever seen a goth kid do is pick his nose. But I tell you, I sure was thinking about going into hiding recently when the school shooting occurred.
Re:I'd sign the petition... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:I'd sign the petition... (Score:2)
niche goth site
Repeating yourself I see. ;-)
Re:I'd sign the petition... (Score:2)
I Know of a guy who was a Dermatolog
Re:I'd sign the petition... (Score:2)
Re:I'd sign the petition... (Score:5, Insightful)
This can be badly misused, and has been already by spammers. I get an enormous amount of spam aimed at my (formerly) published contact emails, and a lot of it comes in complete with the (obsolete) address data from back then. The ONLY way they could have gotten this information is from WHOIS, and I'm not happy about them having it; they have no legitimate reason to be in possession of that data.
I really like what Namecheap is doing. For an extra five or six bucks a year, they'll hide your real address and give you an anonymized contact address... mail sent to this random address will be forwarded to your real email, invisibly to the sender. So, if there is a problem with your domain, you are still contactable. If there's a legal problem with a domain, then of course the real info is going to be available to any form of law enforcement.
But it's hidden from the casual spammer/identity thief, and I am very, very happy about this.
Requiring people to publish information about a domain is sort of a presumption of guilt...."if you're innocent, you have nothing to hide!" Well, I am innocent and I have plenty to hide...like where I live. If I want to host an mail or a web server, my responsibility is to make sure I can be contacted in case of problems. My responsibility is not and never was to tell you exactly who and where I am, no matter what ICANN happens to think.
Re:I'd sign the petition... (Score:2)
Re:I'd sign the petition... (Score:2)
I wouldn't sign the petition... (Score:2)
Well you never read the Terms of Service for domain names. This has always been this way. You have to have a valid record to have a domain. There is a good reason for this and personally I think that any site that doesn't have some type of valid contact information should be shut down. Has you said this is badly misused by spammers and every other person trashing the Internet.
At our company if you want your information hidden. We use or NOC address and contact information for that person. This way yo
Re:I wouldn't sign the petition... (Score:3, Funny)
Very simply, you don't EVER need to know who and what I am, simply because I own a domain. You just don't. A domain is not IP space. And even if I DO have IP space, if you have a problem with an attack coming from that space, you can contact my ISP, who maintains records and can contact me, likely within minutes. If you have a complaint about the domain,
Re:I'd sign the petition... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:I'd sign the petition... (Score:2)
Re:Most people with privacy needs don't need a dom (Score:5, Insightful)
Do you own a car? If so then you are part of the automotive infrastructure of whatever state/country you live in. What would you say if a government agency unilaterally required that all members of the automotive infrastructure post their name, address and telephone number in big bold letters on all their vehicles? That way all the other members of the automotive infrastructure can clearly see your identity so that if/when you cause problems, you can be contacted. Sound good to you? It must because that's exactly what you're condoning for the owners of .us TLDs.
This is not 1988. The Internet can't be summed up in a hosts file. Get your head out of the glory days of the past and join the rest of us in the real world.
Re:Most people with privacy needs don't need a dom (Score:3, Insightful)
A whois query costs seconds. A qwuery to the DMV can be minutes, hours, or even days (DMVs are state agencies, and there are varying levels of response from the various states).
To take your analogy to an extreme, I will suggest that we are all millionaires. Some people can and withdraw $1 million from an account, while others must work 50 years to earn a total of $1 million. Nevertheless,
Re:Most people with privacy needs don't need a dom (Score:3, Insightful)
So what? If I'm willing to pay money for a product for my own vanity, and someone is willing to sell it, that's what commerce is all about. Should I not be allowed to anonymously purchase a mirror at the store for my purposes of vanity?
If you're going to connect infrastructure to the Internet, you should be prepared to announce your identity to the rest of the Internet so that if/when you cause problems, you can be
Re:I'd sign the petition... (Score:5, Interesting)
Back in the mid 1990s I registered two domains. Spam wasn't the problem it is now at the time, and I used a permanent E-mail address. A few years after that I started getting spammed constantly, mostly trying to push other domains or other domain registars at me, along with the weak phishing-type scams trying to make me think my domain had expired. Since then, even though the domains no longer exist, the amount of spam at that address has risen drastically. It gets hundreds a day now, and most of them can be attributed back to registering two domain names. Personally I think you'd be nuts to register a domain either non-privately or with any real contact info nowadays. Spammers will still mine the whois databases, they don't care about the rules prohibiting it.
There are other good reasons as well. What about people who have a stalker? Rape victims or other violent crime victims? Identity theft victims, or those wanting to avoid becoming one? Political activists who don't want bricks thrown through their windows by overzealous people of opposite beliefs?
There are many VERY good reasons to want a private registration, very few of which are "wrong". Private registration also does not mean you're free from the law. My real contact info is in escrow with the proxy service, if they get a subpoena they will release my real info to the police. I'm still bound by the law, I just am no longer bound by the spammers.
Re:I'd sign the petition... (Score:2)
The ruling specifically impacts information published publicly. If you are required to provide accurate information for a non-published database, then there's no real issue. Law enforcement and legal proceedings can learn the true identity of the domain's owner and act accordingly.
Re:I'd sign the petition... (Score:2)
Re:I'd sign the petition... (Score:2)
If you run any sort of mail server that accepts email from webmaster@, hostmaster@, root@, and various others including common usernames you will see an endless amount of spam coming through.
There's no reason to have address information available to the public other than when requested to the company hand
Re:I'd sign the petition... (Score:2)
I use a company that masks my domain registration info. It puts their info instead for any WHOIS lookups. Then, when they receive e-mail that is meant for the listed e-mail address for my domain, they filter out all of the spam and forward an relevent mail to the e-mail address that I have on file with them. It ensures that I have a way to get e-mails regarding my domain without having to sift through all of the spam.
Who cares, it's a stupid domain anyway (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Who cares, it's a stupid domain anyway (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Who cares, it's a stupid domain anyway (Score:2, Insightful)
I think
Re:Who cares, it's a stupid domain anyway (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Who cares, it's a stupid domain anyway (Score:4, Insightful)
This is a rather mean-spirited way of saying "the US originally funded development of the Internet, ergo TLDs are US-centric". Get over it.
-Erwos
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Who cares, it's a stupid domain anyway (Score:2)
don't forget the ICANN 2$ tax (Score:2, Insightful)
ICANN imposes $2 internet tax [theregister.co.uk]
ethics is so overrated (see us gov for examples) you would think people would have a bit more integrity
can you imagine what a mess the Internet is gonna be in 10 years, you think spam and commercialism is bad now, shame because it could of been so much more
Godaddy (Score:5, Informative)
"Today I have the unfortunate responsibility of informing you that there has been a decision made by bureaucrats of a Federal agency that takes away your right to privacy as guaranteed by the United States Constitution.
This decision was unilaterally made by the National Telecommunications and Information Association ("NTIA") www.ntia.doc.gov [doc.gov] without hearings that would determine the impact on those affected, and delivered without notice -- in short, the NTIA decision was made without due process of any kind. This is exactly how our government is not supposed to work.
The effect of this decision is to disallow new private domain name registrations on
I personally find it ironic that our right to
If, like me, you are outraged at the NTIA's decision to strip away our constitutional right to privacy, www.TheDangerOfNoPrivacy.com [thedangerofnoprivacy.com] will provide you with a petition to sign. (Only your name will be published, your address and email information will be kept private.) This Web site also provides a very easy way for you to send either a fax or an email, expressing your outrage, to your Congressperson and Senators. This is all provided at no cost to you. All that is required is for you to take the time to visit www.TheDangerOfNoPrivacy.com [thedangerofnoprivacy.com] sign the petition, and send the fax or email to your legislators.
On my personal Blog, www.BobParsons.com [bobparsons.com] there are a number of articles where you can learn more about the NTIA's unfortunate decision and what you can do to help get it reversed.
I also will be talking about our right to privacy on Radio Go Daddy, our weekly radio show that debuts today, March 30, at 7 PM PST. To find out how to listen in, please visit the Web site dedicated to the show, www.RadioGoDaddy.com [radiogodaddy.com].
You can be sure that I, and everyone at GoDaddy.com, will do everything in our power to get the NTIA decision reversed. However, we need your help. Please visit www.TheDangerOfNoPrivacy.com [thedangerofnoprivacy.com] to sign the petition and express your feelings to your Congressperson and Senators.
Sincerely,
Bob Parsons
President and Founder
GoDaddy.com"
Re:Godaddy (Score:3, Informative)
These bureaucrats stripped away the privacy that you're entitled to as an American
There is no such entitlement (compared to EU, for example).
Constitutional right to privacy (Score:5, Insightful)
The constitutional right to privacy in the United States springs from an interpretation of the Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable search and seizure combined with the et-cetera clauses in the Ninth and Tenth Amendments.
Re:Constitutional right to privacy (Score:3, Insightful)
Slashdot over reacts to some things...
Re:Constitutional right to privacy (Score:5, Insightful)
Why is this any different? Why does a "constitutional right to privacy" not apply to these situations, but should apply to someone registering a DNS domain? A DNS domain is intended to reflect an administrative domain over Internet infrastructure. We need published contact information if you intend on connecting infrastructure to the Internet when that infrastructure is significant enough to warrant its own second-level DNS domain. If you intend to (ab)use a DNS domain as a content label for your Interweb content, you need to be aware of what the DNS domain is intended to represent, and be prepared to abide by the requirements that result from that even though you aren't using your DNS domain for what it was designed.
It's like me going downtown and buying a lot of land just so that I can post some signs carrying some anti-government statements, and then balking because the evil government wants me to identify myself as the owner of that parcel of land. I don't have to own that land in order to exercise my right to free speech. You don't have to own your own little DNS domain in order to have a web outlet for your content.
Re:Constitutional right to privacy (Score:2)
What you're saying is true as far as it goes, but there are perfectly fine ways to satisfy both interests here - you can provide working contact info without actually revealing your identity to the entire world.
Re:Constitutional right to privacy (Score:2, Insightful)
Holy crap, someone ELSE on the planet knows this. I keep having to explain this over and over to people who claim there's no right to privacy in the Constitution except under the catch-all clause of the tenth amendment. You have just restored some small amount of my faith in humanity.
What concerns me is that people feel that knowing who owns a given domain name is an unreasonable search. When you operate a public presence like a domain name, you *normally* hav
Re:Constitutional right to privacy (Score:2)
Im not sure this is analogous to Broadcasting since public airwaves are not in use... and although a large publishing operation is public a small stereotypical poorly xeroxed socialist news letter could be distributed with a reasonable degree of anonymity.
Im not entirely sure how I feel about this yet... but it does seem like having an outlet with anonymity might be a good thing.
Re:Godaddy (Score:3, Interesting)
GoDaddy's practices leave something to be desired - anyone running anything even remotely controversal, especially if adult/porn related, does best to avoid GoDaddy when registering the hosting domain(s).
Ron Bennett
Registrar (Score:2)
Just check the whois [dnsstuff.com] record for angband.pl [angband.pl]...
On the other hand, GoDaddy considers privacy to be an "extra service".
Re:Godaddy (Score:2)
What exactly is the article in the U.S. Constitution that guarantees privacy? Maybe I'm an ignorant foreigner (Dutchman), but I was always under the impression that the U.S. Constitution does not guarantee privacy. Am I wrong?
The referenced website talks about the "First Amendment rights
Use a third-party to register your domain (Score:5, Informative)
Other than that, it should be pointed out that ICANN has had a rule for years that you must have valid contact information in your WHOIS records. Of course, they've also ignored that same rule for years.
Re:Use a third-party to register your domain (Score:5, Interesting)
So while we're on the topic of third parties, some questions:
- has there been any discussion surrounding banning the use of these third parties?
- what are the laws/rules/liabilities/etc. regarding the relationship between third parties and the government, and third parties and their customers, in dealing with issues between the government and a customer?
Re:Use a third-party to register your domain (Score:2)
I would think it'd always be possible for a person who has a legit privacy concern to hire a lawyer to register the domain and handle that stuff for them.
Re:Use a third-party to register your domain (Score:2)
Re:Use a third-party to register your domain (Score:2)
And when the government sends a subpeona to the 'third party' for your name, it takes an extra 5 minutes for them to track you down. I'm sorry, but if you are hosting something bad enough (or spamming millions of messages I guess) for the FBI or whoever to come after you, a third party registrar isn't going to help much.
Re:Use a third-party to register your domain (Score:2)
Ron
Re:Use a third-party to register your domain (Score:2)
Registrant:
Domains by Proxy, Inc.
Do
Re:Use a third-party to register your domain (Score:2)
ccTLDs (two character country TLDs) have much autonomy with many having very different policies / procedures compared to say
Businesses using ccTLDs as their primary domain name, especially if they don't have bonafide operations in the parent country of the ccTLD, should be very wary - ccTLDs can and have changed policies, literally overnight, leaving registrants high and dry
Re:Use a third-party to register your domain (Score:2)
Many of the ccTLDs are older than ICANN and thus not subject to ICANN regulations. I couldn't find a contract between
Am I missing something? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why should
Privacy is the reason (Score:2)
This isn't designed to protect us from the law, it's a means to have a li
Good (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Good (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Good (Score:2)
example.us is not a TLD. Neither is example.com.
Abolition of non-country post-fixed TLD (Score:3, Funny)
and this to me blurrs what specific law applies to what information.
So get a domain in Denmark (Score:5, Informative)
Re:So get a domain in Denmark (Score:2)
ASP.NET built with Visual Studio.NET puts DIVs all over the place and IE has no problem with them.
toys (Score:2, Funny)
What I don't like... (Score:3, Insightful)
I got an e-mail from godaddy yesterday about this ruling, and the whole time I was reading it I was thinking of how godaddy is almost hypocritical in sending such an e-mail.
They want you to sign the petition to allow you to register the
Anonymity should be free.
Re:What I don't like... (Score:2)
I believe that's "Anonymity wants to be Free!"
Fuc.kthe.us (Score:3, Funny)
Re:HYPOCRITE !!! (Score:2)
Re:Fuc.kthe.us (Score:2)
I daresay however others might not share my inddiference towards the association (in any orientation) of the flag with this statement.
Re:Fuc.kthe.us (Score:2)
I meant, a non-citizen who says "F**k the US" may have his reasons for saying so. I may not agree but that's not important.
On the other hand, a citizen of the US (as is the case here) who is free to leave, yet stays, enjoys all the benefits of the country and still says "F**k the US" should stop his whining. He should also remember there are plenty of places where a comment like "F**K countryname" would see the person strung up. He is abusing in an offensive manner a freedom he takes for gran
Links to decision? (Score:5, Insightful)
By following the link from the petition site to the NTIA home page, there's nothing there about this particular decision, and some preliminary hunting hasn't shown up the relevant article for this.
Most of the time us Slashdot readers can find the information for ourselves, but here we are being asked to sign a petition based on the evidence presented by the poster, not by reading the docs for ourselves (of cause we would all have RTFA if it was posted, obviously). I think it's a bit underhand asking us to sign this petition on an obsure decision that is not easy to find, without providing a link to the decision.
If anyone can find a link to the decision I'd be very grateful.
Re:Links to decision? (Score:2)
What's the big deal... (Score:4, Insightful)
Most of us will pay to register them with a credit card or a check or something with our identity attached to it anyway. If anyone really wanted to find out who owns/runs the domain it wouldn't be too hard. Most of the time, they could also figure it out by tracing where it is hosted and finding some information on who pays the bills there as well.
If you want a free (and anonymous) web page, sign up for some cheesy service online where you are a subdomain of someone else. If not, then pony up and give some legit information to the company you buy the domain from.
Re:bollocks (Score:2)
NTIA Follow up statement (Score:5, Funny)
.US Registry Censors Domains Too ... (Score:5, Interesting)
So much for freedom of speech and expression in
I've owned FuckCensorship.COM /
In short,
Domain Name FUCKCENSORSHIP.US
Domain ID D1877066-US
Sponsoring Registrar INTERCOSMOS MEDIA GROUP, INC. D.B.A. DIRECTNIC.COM
Domain Status serverDeleteProhibited
Domain Status serverTransferProhibited
Domain Status serverUpdateProhibited
Registrant ID IMG-146583
Registrant Name Ron Bennett
Registrant Organization Ron Bennett
Registrant Address1 PO BOX 6532
Registrant City Wyomissing
Registrant State/Province PA
Registrant Postal Code 19610-0532
Registrant Country United States
Registrant Country Code US
Registrant Phone Number +1.6107776566
Registrant Email bennett@wyomissing.com
Registrant Application Purpose P1
Registrant Nexus Category C11
Administrative Contact ID IMG-146583
Administrative Contact Name Ron Bennett
Administrative Contact Organization Ron Bennett
Administrative Contact Address1 PO BOX 6532
Administrative Contact City Wyomissing
Administrative Contact State/Province PA
Administrative Contact Postal Code 19610-0532
Administrative Contact Country United States
Administrative Contact Country Code US
Administrative Contact Phone Number +1.6107776566
Administrative Contact Email bennett@wyomissing.com
Administrative Contact Application Purpose P1
Administrative Contact Nexus Category C11
Billing Contact ID IMG-146583
Billing Contact Name Ron Bennett
Billing Contact Organization Ron Bennett
Billing Contact Address1 PO BOX 6532
Billing Contact City Wyomissing
Billing Contact State/Province PA
Billing Contact Postal Code 19610-0532
Billing Contact Country United States
Billing Contact Country Code US
Billing Contact Phone Number +1.6107776566
Billing Contact Email bennett@wyomissing.com
Billing Contact Application Purpose P1
Billing Contact Nexus Category C11
Technical Contact ID IMG-146583
Technical Contact Name Ron Bennett
Technical Contact Organization Ron Bennett
Technical Contact Address1 PO BOX 6532
Technical Contact City Wyomissing
Technical Contact State/Province PA
Technical Contact Postal Code 19610-0532
Technical Contact Country United States
Technical Contact Country Code US
Technical Contact Phone Number +1.6107776566
Technical Contact Email bennett@wyomissing.com
Technical Contact Application Purpose P1
Technical Contact Nexus Category C11
Name Server INVALIDNS1.NEUSTAR.COM
Name Server INVALIDNS2.NEUSTAR.COM
Created by Registrar INTERCOSMOS MEDIA GROUP, INC. D.B.A. DIRECTNIC.COM
Last Updated by Registrar BATCHCSR
Domain Registration Date Wed Apr 24 17:52:47 GMT+00:00 2002
Domain Expiration Date Sat Apr 23 23:59:59 GMT+00:00 2005
Domain Last Updated Date Sat Apr 24 04:35:46 GMT+00:00 2004
Whois database was last updated on: Thu Mar 31 13:14:23 GMT 2005
Re:.US Registry Censors Domains Too ... (Score:2)
I could perhaps file a lawsuit against the NTIA, but doubt I'd succeed based on past lawsuits against the "old" NSI years ago over a similar issue with "dirty" domains in
Ban Dihydrogen Oxide!!! (Score:5, Informative)
I will fault NTIA for apparently having no mention of the policy on their website (at least last time I checked yesterday). There's no rational reason for them to either set new policy like this or start enforcing existing policy without hearings or public comment. It's even less excuable that after the fact they won't provide their side of the story. They refused comment in the couple of media stories I saw about this.
By the way, that's right, it's not a new policy, it's enforcement of a previously unenforced existing policy. So for that, I think some blame may lay on the registrars who allowed proxy registrations for
Sounds totally reasonable to me. (Score:2)
3. can consist of all kinds of 4. data which in turn can contain 5. encoded information.
Just this slightest possibility will make you 6. a terrorist and therefore all you 7. civil rights will be taken from you untill further notice.
Am I negative? NO WAY! In the Netherlands there are plans to force ISP's to log and keep track of theur users. Websites they visited, mails they've sent and so on and so on.
Ey.
Good! (Score:2, Insightful)
You don't need an anonymous domain registration to run an anonymous Web site. You don't need a domain registration to run a Web site at all. Domain registrations aren't anonymous anyway - your information is still vulnerable t
My take on it... (Score:2)
Re:My take on it... (Score:2)
Further, if you have some form of network emergency and need to contact the domain holder immediately, you're not just limited by the availability (business hours?) of the domain holder, but by the availability (business hours) of all of the proxies in between.
In short, just having contact i
Yawn. (Score:2)
If ICANN, UCAN2! (Score:3, Interesting)
As for providing false information, an article on the CircleID website quotes, "It is now illegal to provide false information when registering a domain name." It goes on to say, "Last year, there was a brief attempt to make registrars responsible for the accuracy of the Whois database. Fortunately, that legislation failed. What did become law was a new, stiff penalty (7 years) for providing false WHOIS information. While this looming jail time might have some sway over US-based crooks, it will do little to get accurate information from those who live overseas." As I mentioned before, this is merely a flesh-wound in stopping the spam-war.
My greatest fear is having someone show up on my doorstep with intent to harm my family, property, or myself because that person wants my domain name. And as it seems with almost every law in America, it takes spilled blood to have those laws abolished or less, modified in some feeble attempt to make a slight few of us happy.
What needs to happen is the placement of an organization who tracks the "licensing" of domains and their registrants. If I were to require contact with a site operator, I would first have to call them to obtain contact information, however, that information would be limited to a mailing address, NOT a home address, name, phone number, and email.
Registration would require a name and a mailing address (NOT a home address). If a mailing address is not possible, then a phone number and email may be relinquished by the domain host. The registrant has the option of unlisting this information completely, however, contact/complaints must be made through the organization. A failure to comply with requests from the organization within 30 calendar days would ultimately mean a "freeze" on the domain. After 90 days (60 days from the beginning of a domain freeze), the domain is wiped off the face of the internet. This should light a fire under anyone's ass.
This may not sound like the most 'perfect' plan, though is a lot better than what's in place now. And you may be thinking, "we already have an organization that does that," but no, ICANN functions like a cat, lying around all day, looking pretty, propping up a leg in the corner of the room to lick itself and essentially, just look pretty. We need an organization that isn't afraid of grabbing some sack to make things happen.
There is no... (Score:2)
Correct me if I am wrong. Anyone? Anyone? Bueller?
(BTW, privacy != anonymity)
Seriously misleading headline (Score:2)
So what? (Score:3, Insightful)
The government makes decisions like this. If you like the decisions, you vote for the same people next time. If you don't, you vote for somebody else. If most of the people who vote disagree with you, you cowboy up and live with it, or move.
Use a different domain if you want to be anonymous.
Re:I have no problem with this (Score:2)
And users of security communities such as Full-Disclosure, who many big companies would LOVE to silence...
And anyone who might want to run a website criticizing an oppressive government, not necessarily (nor discounting) the U.S...
Re:I have no problem with this (Score:2)
Ever ran an anti-spam site and had a spammer visit you?
No? Well, good for you, but others haven't been so lucky.
There are reasons not to plaster your home address all over the net. If that makes me one of the tin-foil hat folks, then I'll be proud to wear mine, shiny side out, of course.
Re:I have no problem with this (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What Problem? (Score:3, Insightful)
But I see your point. Imagine that I could take a
I guess we don't want "attorneygeneral.calif.us" to be a phishing site asking people to sign up for identity theft protection.
ISO 3166! why not use .gov ? (Score:3)
Using GB vs. UK (Score:2)
Northern Ireland is not in Great Britain, so GB is a bit of a misnomer to use in place of UK.
I haven't seen any NI cars with the standard EU-type numberplates yet. Will they have GB on them the same way English ones do? It makes little sense if they do.
Re:What Problem? (Score:2)
That said, I don't think its a big deal. Let me put it to you this way. If you own a website, there are only a few reasons. One is to distribute some type of information (software counts). This is the one that could get you in trouble. Another possibility is to sell or advertise something. There are more, but these seem to cover the majority.
In the second case,
Re:What Problem? (Score:2)
Being that I'm a guy (and why do guys care about wedding crap
An
Re:What Problem? (Score:2)
Re:Good - uh, think again (Score:5, Informative)
A Mailboxes, Etc. address is just as anonymous as a fake address.
If you really need to know the contact information, you can subpoena the billing information for the domain. That can NOT be forged, unless the owner also wants to do time for credit card fraud.
These sort of rules only inconvenience ordinary people, who wish to remain anonymous for one reason or another.
My reason to always put fake info (it looks real though) in my domain registrations is that I don't want the net.kooks come knock on my door every time they get upset about what I publish on the websites. If they want to contact me, they either use email or subpoena the billing info (which is not fake).
Re:Good - uh, think again (Score:2)
With that said, the Mailboxes, Etc. approach is among the best overall - *legal* when done correctly, and can be very anonymous if one has an alternate bonafide physical mailing address that's not directly tied to them; not intended to stop the authorities tracing one dow
Re:Good - uh, think again (Score:2)
No, I didn't.
That law would only applies, if I commit a felony crime and use a domain registered with fake contact information in some way while committing the crime.
Re:Good - uh, think again (Score:2)
Wanted to address this as well.
It is not the best overall approach, because it would cost me money. I do not own a business, probably never will. I have no use for a Mailboxes, Etc. mailbox, other than to circumvent
Re:Good (Score:2)
Oh, wait there isn't one. A little more reason, and a little less (ridiculous) rhetoric would do you good.
Re:Uh.. (Score:2)
Re:I don't mind and look forward to the day... (Score:2)
Re:Here's what I put into the petition. (Score:2)
The only reason this information would be available is if you have registered a DNS domain for infrastructure that you are connecting to the Internet. If you are not connecting infrastructure to the Internet, you should not need a DNS domain.
If you want to publish web content anonymously, get in touch with any of the hundreds of web providers out there that will host your content on their
Re:Here's what I put into the petition. (Score:3, Insightful)
For those of you who failed miserably at catching the satire in this, let me explain it.
I strongly disagree with the precedent this decision will set. As a strong believer in personal privacy, and an avid internet user, the thought that my personal information would be freely available to any person connected to the internet is scary.
I make the false assumption that by being on the internet, my information is available to everyone.
Leaving information such as my name, address, and telephone number o