Inside the DOJ's Domain Name Graveyard 72
hugheseyau writes "Between November 2010 and May 2011, the US Department of Justice (DoJ), under many banners including the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI), seized over 140 domain names from sites allegedly engaged in the 'illegal sale and distribution of counterfeit goods and copyrighted works' or other illegal activities. But what exactly happens when domains are seized in such a manner? This article provides insight into the takedown process as well as providing a unique look into the DoJ's domain name graveyard."
intellectual property is censorship (Score:4, Interesting)
Intellectual property is censorship. The First Amendment should be read as an implicit repeal: if only "protected speech" is protected - for example, speaking a derivative work is not regarded as protected - then there is no anti-censorship provision whatever.
Pssssshhhh (Score:5, Interesting)
makes you wonder (Score:2)
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But, I guess scamming people is a "business"...
The list is about what I expected (Score:3, Insightful)
It's mostly counterfeit goods domains seized, almost nothing for online pirate streaming, though a few of those are there.
But this points out that the DNS system is a weak link, and can no longer be trusted. Something peerless should replace it, but at this point in time, anything that does needs to bridge the existing DNS system.
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It's mostly counterfeit goods domains seized, almost nothing for online pirate streaming, though a few of those are there.
Mostly counterfeit goods, but quite a few gambling sites (was in the news a while ago), and then things like torrent-finder.com, planetmoviez.com, filespump.com, thepiratecity.org
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A fair number of the seized domains weren't hosting pirated material, but linked to sites that streamed media.
What happens over time? (Score:4, Interesting)
Will the domain names stay 'seized' forever? Or will the DOJ allow them to be sold at some point in the future, the way other seized assets are sold off?
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Surely they will expire at some point if they don't pay the renewal fees?
Re:What happens over time? (Score:5, Informative)
Until then, please install the MafiaaFire redirector [mozilla.org], it handles some of domains stolen by DoJ. You probably won't need any of them and can search for the new URLs in seconds, but it's more about spreading the word.
Re:What happens over time? (Score:4, Interesting)
i got dibs on "bishoe.com"
for my bisexual shoe fetish site
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i got dibs on "bishoe.com"
A ripoff of Apple's "iShoe.com"?
Your tax dollars at work (Score:1)
Taxes - they WILL be used against you.
Ignorance of net neutrality (Score:2)
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- Block a domain because it has offended the president
- Block a domain because they are 'against us'
- Block a domain because of activists
and the list goes on...
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- Jail a person because they have sold drugs
- Jail a person because they force people to sell their bodies
- Jail a person because they ran over someone else while drunk
and the list goes on...
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- Jail a person because they have sold drugs
- Jail a person because they force people to sell their bodies
- Jail a person because they ran over someone else while drunk
One of those things is not like the other...
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- Jail a person because they have sold drugs
- Jail a person because they force people to sell their bodies
- Jail a person because they ran over someone else while drunk
One of those things is not like the other...
Interesting, the oddball I would have picked is the one above that does not have a person actively doing something to second person that the second person doesn't want.
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Selling drugs - for whatever reason the person wants the drugs. I'm not debating addiction, just that the both parties are willing participants. Same thing with the sex worker (once again, slavery is something else)
But hitting someone with your car while your DUI? That seems pretty damn jail-able to me.
Re:Ignorance of net neutrality (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Ignorance of net neutrality (Score:4, Insightful)
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What? The DMCA does not say content can be taken down by the owners. It says that IF the owners request content to be removed, AND THE SITE DOES IT, then the site can not be charged with copyright infringement.
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Re:Ignorance of net neutrality (Score:4, Interesting)
- Jail a person because they ran over someone else while drunk
If you can run over someone in the US while driving drunk in France, it may be a comparison. However, this is the US going to France and kidnapping the drunk driver for running over someone IN FRANCE. And is still a very bad analogy.
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Replace "France" with "Mexico", and "Drunk driving" with "shooting a DEA agent", and you have, in fact, got something the US has done at least once or twice in the past.
Or, perhaps, replace "France" with "Pakistan", and "Drunk driving" with "Organizing terrorist plots", and you've got something the US did fairly recently and made a big show of...
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Actually, it seems they like those. They read them all the time. Well, if they publish frequently enough. I've seen every intelligence organization I've ever heard of, and quite a few even friends in the government (current and retired) couldn't guess at. Some of them take some substantial research, but you know it's bound to be something with the US Gov't when it ends in .gov or .mil. Very few .gov's that I've seen come by are locate or state. Maybe it's because of the demographic w
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Ask Slashdot: Mesh DNS Options? (Score:3)
Hey, Slashdot; Could you clue me? What is the state of alternative DNS systems, particularly something mesh- or web-of-trust- oriented? Any live systems that are usable now? Any projects that look promising where I could lend a hand with code or whatever?
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NetSuKuku - mesh and web-of-trust- oriented http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Netsukuku
Open NIC - classic style alternative http://www.opennicproject.org
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Fundamentally Corrupt (Score:1)
It's really hard to visualize just how fundamentally corrupt the US government is. Today's /. gives a clue - Patent Trolls, Video Felonies and a school superintendent pointing out that schools are less important the prisons.
We the people, really need to get in on the process and figure out how to buy some politicians.
Maybe they'll get the joke? (Score:2)
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viewdns.info (Score:2)
However, it lacks a historical WHOIS tool.. and using a historical WHOS tool I can see that the domain had an invalid WHOIS record until they anonymised it yesterday...
seizedservers.com (Score:2)
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seizedservers.com, seizedservers.org and seizedservers.net each have different owners.
Re:Intent (Score:5, Insightful)
The article mentioned nothing I could see about the owners and operators of the site being convicted of any crime. That is what disturbs me. Quite aside from the potential future free speech ramifications, the presumption of innocence seems to be forgotten. This really looks like the US Govt. picking up the tab for making inconvenient sites go away so the trademark holders etc. don't have to dip into their precious profits.
Can anyone point to a conviction that lead to this action?
What TLD's can they seize? (Score:2)
I noticed that most are .com, but I did notice 5 in .net, 2 in .org and 1 in .cc.
Does the US own .org and .cc like the own .com/.net? (one may argue finer points of ownership, but if they can do with them as they will, the point is moot).
If they the .org TLD, why would pirate-bay.org be up?
Is it a matter of what registrar they are registered with and it just so happens .com is almost (or is entirely?) owned by US registrars, while .net/.org/.cc have multi-national registrars?
that
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Organization of the Internet aside, I figured they could seize them as property of someone in their jurisdiction who ran afoul of the law.
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Each of the seized domains were using a TLD/ccTLD extension where the registry was in the United States. .cc is administered by Verisign.
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All of the domains seized were essentially property owned by the company that happens to lie on US soil. If the owner of the web site was convicted of a crime, this would be fair game, but I don't think there was any court proceeding over these domains, though the vast majority of them were seized for good reason from looking at the names. Selling counterfeit drugs, designer good, and stuff like that will get you the notice of powerful people.
viewdns.info returns aren't very complete (Score:1)
I entered one of my own ips and got back only 7 of the 40 or so domains hosted on that box. Most of those domains have been there for years. Any other tool I've ever tried for this before always disclaims that the results will be incomplete as they are based on using search engines.
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Seizure without trial (Score:2)