Jeffrey and all Re: Identifying user concerns I have changed the subject line to a more appropriate one. This is an excellent idea, one that I would dearly love to participate in. However, I would like to change item (2), phishing, to encompass fraud which may appear to be phishing typo domains at first glance, but upon analysis found not to be. As such I would like to say fraud for want of a better word. There are many domains with fake whois, registered via proxy servers paid for by anonymous means that make the registrant untraceable. This is deliberately so. Example: http://butterfis.com/sl/ Likewise many domains are registered with stolen credit card details, the victims details appearing in whois, opening them up to even more abuse. I have a lot of case history on this issue. Some resellers even offer domain registrations with no whois details ever asked. Of course, this is taking us into the third point you have here, the second point sometimes even originating from the first. While I would not dare register a domain without some form of whois protection, I was extremely relieved when recent initiatives to have whois details in domains removed from public scrutiny. At the moment we are each other's best watchdogs and we simply cannot afford general whois privacy, since this would simply hide a problem and not fix a problem. Yet we have to break this vicious cycle and move forward. Anonymity must not result in no responsibility. However this is what we are seeing currently. In fact this is currently used to actually identity victims of credit card fraud. We have teachers, estate agents etc living in small towns all across America who are not even aware they own a Microsoft Lottery, a NatWest Bank, FBI or CIA spoof domain. Big business is ignoring this problem. We have hundreds of supposedly American citizens with a fetish for registering Central Bank of Nigeria domains all of a sudden. There is another group of people who is not in the ICANN, registrar or registrant class, who are victims of a system with quite a few quirks and no accountability. This is undermining faith in the Internet since the average Internet user can simply not understand how such a system as advanced and sophisticated as the Internet can operate with no accountability. These are ordinary people that may not be very technical and are from all over the world with no meaningful recourse. I can carry on and on, but I think this is enough to get the point across. I suggest the following documents would be a starting point: http://www.icann.org/announcements/advisory-10may02.htm http://www.icann.org/announcements/advisory-03apr03.htm Regards Derek http://www.aa419.org
Danny and all my friends,
I think in order to make some progress identifying users main concerns, and listing them would be a good first start. So from our members anyway, here is a short list:
1.) Solving the growing spam problem. 2.) Means and methods of addressing phishing 3.) Personal privacy on the net.
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Regards,
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