Andrew A big warning notice in the whois output telling them to pay their registrars might work better :) M -- Mr Michele Neylon Blacknight Solutions Hosting, Colocation & Domains http://www.blacknight.host/ http://blog.blacknight.com/ http://ceo.hosting/ Intl. +353 (0) 59 9183072 Direct Dial: +353 (0)59 9183090 ------------------------------- Blacknight Internet Solutions Ltd, Unit 12A,Barrowside Business Park,Sleaty Road,Graiguecullen,Carlow,Ireland Company No.: 370845 On 22/01/2016, 14:26, "gtld-tech-bounces@icann.org on behalf of Andrew Sullivan" <gtld-tech-bounces@icann.org on behalf of asullivan@dyn.com> wrote:
On Fri, Jan 22, 2016 at 05:24:35AM +0100, Patrik Fältström wrote:
The registry expiration date, which is already in the registry, is definitely enough.
The problem that people claim to want to solve, however, is that registrants are sometimes surprised at expiration because their registrar says something's expired when the whois doesn't say that. The registrar then sells the registry-registered name off to some other registrant.
The idea is that by putting this data in the public whois, registrants wont get surprised this way. I have pretty grave doubts that this idea is correct, but I can see the logic.
Can we please instead try to make the lifecycle of a domain name _simpler_ so people do understand it? Already today it is extremely complicated. Specifically in the end game, and yes, as pointed out, that is used by some registries and registrars in a way that is viewed by some as not 100% "ok".
Yes.
A
-- Andrew Sullivan Dyn asullivan@dyn.com