Of course George is correct on this, wrt ASCII names. But we are seeing punycode (IDN) look-alike names a bit more often rear their ugly heads in the wild. I am unsure how or whether that could realistically be addressed through TMCH/sunrise/claims protection, but probably we all would agree we should protect against them if possible? Anyone have ideas whether it would be possible? Thanks, Mike Mike Rodenbaugh RODENBAUGH LAW tel/fax: +1.415.738.8087 http://rodenbaugh.com On Tue, May 30, 2017 at 8:56 PM, George Kirikos <icann@leap.com> wrote:
Hello,
On Tue, May 30, 2017 at 11:33 PM, Jonathan Agmon <jonathan.agmon@ip-law.legal> wrote:
I would therefore suggest that you consider adding a few additional rules to your addendum proposal:
1. Upper/Lower case substitution (to avoid abuse of the fact that the DNS is case sensitive);
Domain names are *not* case sensitive. The owner of Example.com doesn't need to worry about anyone cybersquatting on eXample.com, eXAMPle.com, EXAmple.com, eXaMpLe.CoM, etc.
Sincerely,
George Kirikos 416-588-0269 http://www.leap.com/ _______________________________________________ gnso-rpm-wg mailing list gnso-rpm-wg@icann.org https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/gnso-rpm-wg