FYI, I am aware of enough evidence of some disruption of registrar
services due to "creative" processing. However, I agree that we should
base a statement on public info.
For the record, I agree with the statement that deleted names should be
free (in the sense that they should be publicly available, not taken as
hostage by regiustries or registrars). Moreover, I am strongly opposed to
*any* auction. The point is that if we start by accepting auctions on
expired/deleted names, we establish a principle that can be used in the
future by registries/registrars on auctioning *any* domain name. This
might sound irrelevant if we think of .com or any already well-established
TLD, but I'm sure you see the point for the future new TLDs.
Regards,
Roberto GAETANO
ALAC
ICANN BoD Liaison
From: Jean Armour Polly <mom@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: Thomas Roessler <roessler@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
CC: alac@xxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [alac] [fwd] [council] re proposed resolution for issues
report on deleted names (from: philip.sheppard@xxxxxx)
Date: Thu, 6 Jan 2005 23:01:54 -0500
Thanks for forwarding, It seems far from neutral to me. I would have to
have more data to START from the premise that "the re-selling of certain
deleted or expiring names has lead to unforeseen strains on the ability
of registries and registrars to manage their business efficiently" and
that it has affected the "service level provided to users and the meaning
of ICANN accredited as it applies to registrars."
I think expired domain names want to be free- meaning expired ones
should go back to the public to be re-purchased. I certainly don't think
their former registrars have any right at all to auction them and keep
the spoils. I'm sure there's a way to auction them through a
disinterested third party. I agree that resarch should be done and a
report produced.
--
Jean Armour Polly
http://www.netmom.com/
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