Farzi,
As an initial matter I disagree (and suspect registers would as well) that there is no cost for over-suspending and that bulk, automated, low-specificity suspension is simply the cheapest way to comply. The cost for
this is the loss of revenue the registrar would have received from renewal of the domains and the loss of the customer. You also seem to be disregarding the real compliance and reputational costs for over suspending. I doubt any registrar wants to be viewed
as a provider that arbitrarily suspends customer domain names. These are all very string, and very real, incentives against over suspension.
If you provide the domain list and notice I would be interested in seeing it.
Best regards,
Marc H. Trachtenberg
Shareholder
Chair, Internet, Domain Name, e-Commerce and Social Media Practice
Greenberg Traurig, LLP
Aspen Chicago
411 E. Main Street 360 North Green Street
Suite 207 | Aspen, CO 81611 Suite 1300 | Chicago, IL 60607
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trac@gtlaw.com | www.gtlaw.com
| View GT Biography
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From: farzaneh badii via Gnso-dnsabuse-pdp <gnso-dnsabuse-pdp@icann.org>
Sent: Thursday, July 2, 2026 10:21 AM
To: gnso-dnsabuse-pdp@icann.org
Subject: [Gnso-dnsabuse-pdp] when ADC leads to bulk suspension and sweeps in innocent registrants-A real case
*EXTERNAL TO GT*
Dear all,
I am providing a real-world example with false positives, bulk suspension, sweeping in innocent registrants and the account was suspended as “high risk” following ADC-related action. We are not
asking this PDP to develop a fully fledged complaint mechanisms. However, registrars should at least be required to provide a means for a Registered Name Holder to submit a complaint regarding an account suspension or other actions. It can just be a form.
It can be just one sentence in the recommendation.
Summary:
A registrant using [will provide the name of the registrar upon request] received a single form notice disabling 73 domains across their account and locking the account
entirely. This is some part of the communication they received: "Following a thorough
review of your domain portfolio and the associated abuse reports, we have assessed that your account poses a high risk."
The notice cited one internal reference number and stated the domains "appear to have been recently registered for the purpose of abuse," with no domain-specific evidence,
no explanation of the alleged abuse type, and no appeal path, the email explicitly stated the decision was "final and will not be reversed."
I'm not including the domain list here but can share it, along with the original notice, upon request.
Here we are dealing with a case that we are actually making policy about:
Honestly, I don't think a specific example should be necessary to establish that this is a problem because the incentive structure alone makes the outcome predictable. Registrars
bear real compliance and reputational costs for under-responding abuse reports, and essentially no cost for over-suspending. (I have mentioned this before in numerous DNS abuse meetings we had, at least since 2019)
Bulk, automated, low-specificity suspension is simply the cheapest way to comply. Absent a requirement for individualized evidence and a mandatory appeal/correction path,
this outcome, broad account-level action, misattributed domains, no recourse is the rational result of the incentives registrars face.
Happy to provide further documentation on request.
Farzaneh