Perhaps I put false information because I don't want people noseying around my private information.
That's fine, then your registrar tells you to fix it or cancels your registration under the WDPRS rules.
If I break the law, let law enforcement deal with me.
Indeed. Eventually. Not everything that is anti-social is or should be illegal, and every society has a range of sanctions below those that involve policemen and courts.
And I don't think your lying, I know people who use whois in the way your describing. But if you (and they) are to have access to my personal information, I'd like to know who you are, what your interest is, how you will handle the data you collect (following which privacy regulations, Japan's?)
Once again, I am baffled at the assumption that the Internet should be run for the benefit of us vanity domain registrants rather than for the benefit of its users. We're already seeing increasing amounts of preemptive blacklisting of ESPs (mail service bureaus) whose customers send annoying mail, even though that blocks a fair amount of less annoying mail, too. Given how annoying domains with anonymous or false WHOIS info tend to be, I expect we'll be seeing increasing amounts of preemptive blacklisting there, too. You don't have to say who you are, but we don't have to accept your traffic. R's, John