Sorry, forgot one thing. At 27/03/2013 01:01 PM, Alan Greenberg wrote:
At 27/03/2013 12:20 PM, Evan Leibovitch wrote:
On 27 March 2013 11:47, Garth Bruen at KnujOn <<mailto:gbruen@knujon.com>gbruen@knujon.com> wrote:
Change the WHOIS Accuracy Specification #5 from: âUpon the occurrence of a Registered Name Holder's willful provision of inaccurate or unreliable WHOIS information â To: âUpon the REPORT OR DISCOVERY of a Registered Name Holder's willful provision of inaccurate or unreliable WHOIS information â
Agreed, though I think that "report" is sufficient. A discovery that is unreported can't be of much help.
See my e-mail just sent which explains why I think that "report" is overly broad.
Don't agree about omitting discovery. That covers the case where a registrar "discovers" the problem, likely due to one of the required checks mandated in the earlier sections of the specification. It does not make sense for a registrar to have to report the problem to itself, yet the predicate part of this sentence is what allows the registrar to disable the domain with impunity. Alan
AND modify the contract language of 3.7.8 from: "...Registrar shall, upon notification by any person of an inaccuracy in the contact information associated with a Registered Name sponsored by Registrar, take reasonable steps to investigate that claimed inaccuracy. In the event Registrar learns of inaccurate contact information associated with a Registered Name it sponsors, it shall take reasonable steps to correct that inaccuracy." To: "...Registrar shall, upon notification by any person of an inaccuracy in the contact information associated with a Registered Name sponsored by Registrar, take reasonable steps to investigate that claimed inaccuracy. In the event Registrar learns of inaccurate contact information associated with a Registered Name it sponsors, it shall take reasonable steps to correct that inaccuracy AND IF NEEDED CANCEL OR SUSPEND THE DOMAIN IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE ACCURACY SPECIFICATION."
I'm OK with the intent, but would suggest something more explicit, that allows for a period of time to make corrections.
"...Registrar shall, upon notification by any person of an inaccuracy in the contact information associated with a Registered Name sponsored by Registrar, take reasonable steps to investigate that claimed inaccuracy. In the event Registrar learns of inaccurate contact information associated with a Registered Name it sponsors, it shall take reasonable steps to correct that inaccuracy. Domains that maintain inaccurate information, after given reasonable time to be corrected upon notification, shall be cancelled or suspended by the Registrar in accordance with the accuracy specification.
Is this any more palatable?
Whois Accuracy Specification explicitly gives a 15 day window after which te registrar must disable the domain.
Alan
- Evan