Cheryl, Thank you for your response. As this issue was considered during the Thursday Delhi Public Forum, I am of the view that this topic warrants attention:
SUSAN CRAWFORD: Good afternoon. I'm Susan Crawford, a member of the ICANN board. We've had a number of interventions this morning speaking about concerns about front-running, other actions by registries and registrars. The board will be meeting here again tomorrow morning, and one of the items we'll be discussing on our agenda is a proposed resolution suggesting that the GNSO Council consider initiating an issues report, which is the first step in a policy development process, that would be discussing whether it might be appropriate for restrictions to exist on gTLD registries or registrars that relate to -- these are the words and their contract -- that relate to warehousing and speculation in domain names. So that's a subject for the board's discussion tomorrow. This item, warehousing and speculation in domain names, is specifically called out in the contracts that registries and registrars have with ICANN as an appropriate subject for the development of a consensus policy. So the board may be suggesting to the GNSO Council that such a policy process begin. Thank you very much."
For the benefit of the community, it may help those following this discussion to first read the wikipedia entry on domain warehousing -- I have reproduced it below: "Domain name warehousing is the common practice of registrars obtaining control of domain names with the intent to hold or warehouse names for their use and/or profit. Also see domain tasting, a related business practice employed by registrants. Typically this practice occurs after a domain name has expired and the previous owner (registrant) has not exercised his/her right to renew that name within the allotted time frame (approximately 45 days following expiration). Domain's expiration date and time are easily calculated based off the expiration date in the whois and the redemption process. According to GNSO Council Deletes Task Force Report (2003), a council organized under the Internet Corporation For Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), three specific modes of warehousing were identified: 1. The registrant allows the domain name to lapse, but registrar fails to delete the domain name during the grace period, resulting in a paid renewal to the registry. The registrar subsequently assumes registration of the domain name. 2. The registrant purchases the domain name through fraud and the registrar assumes registration of the name to resell in order to minimize losses. 3. The registrar registers the domain in its own name outright. When the phrase "Domain Warehousing" was coined in the late 1990s, ICANN registrars were two dimensional entities that served registrants of domain names. The concern at that time was that a registrar would register available domain names and then offer to re-sell those registrations at a "higher than registration" price to potential registrants. By 2006 the name space had clearly matured and the line between registrars, media companies such as AOL.com (who operate ICANN accredited registrars to manage their name portfolios) and large scale commercial registrants (who operate ICANN accredited registrars as security measures) had blurred. It has been hypothesized that by 2010 many large corporations or commercial registrants of domain names will operate an ICANN accredited registrar as a security measure to protect and manage valuable name; and trademark inventory. The primary concern today when one speaks of Domain Warehousing is that a retail registrar, which has historically focused on serving its individual and small business registrants, will make the domain name renewals process difficult, convoluted or price prohibitive in an effort to unseat exasperated registrants and usurp their registration rights for a profit greater than the potential renewal fee they could earn. An additional concern is that companies pooling scores of drop registrars for additional registry connections will stand at the expiring domain spigot conducting domain tasting without paying, and then warehouse those which meet traffic criteria while denying the broader community a fair opportunity to compete for those expiring names. As of this writing the governing body over domain name registration, ICANN, has yet to address those potential inequities. Registrars are in a unique position to impact domain name pricing by introducing competitive bidding or auctions for expired domain names. Circumstances are further impacted when registrars opt not to market the domains in the near terms, thereby excluding the recycling of warehoused names indefinitely." best regards, Danny ____________________________________________________________________________________ Never miss a thing. Make Yahoo your home page. http://www.yahoo.com/r/hs