[registrars] Private Registration Data Whois

tbarrett tbarrett at encirca.biz
Wed Mar 31 20:44:48 UTC 2004


EnCirca also has such a service.  We offer it for free.

Tom


-----Original Message-----
From: owner-registrars at gnso.icann.org
[mailto:owner-registrars at gnso.icann.org] On Behalf Of Paul Stahura
Sent: Wednesday, March 31, 2004 3:28 PM
To: 'Larry Erlich'; registrars at dnso.org
Subject: RE: [registrars] Private Registration Data Whois


Larry,
eNom has such a service (we call it ID Protect).
Paul


-----Original Message-----
From: owner-registrars at gnso.icann.org
[mailto:owner-registrars at gnso.icann.org] On Behalf Of Larry Erlich
Sent: Wednesday, March 31, 2004 9:10 AM
To: registrars at dnso.org
Subject: [registrars] Private Registration Data Whois

>From a Network Solutions email that
I just received:

--ICANN requires personal contact information associated
--with a domain name registration be made available for --anyone to view on
the web in a public WHOIS database. 
--
--With our Private Registration service you will get alternate --contact
information for your domain name registrations. --The contact information
you want to keep private is kept --out of the public WHOIS database.
--                                            
--Our introductory price of $5 per year per domain name is --expiring soon.
So add Private Registration to your domain --name registrations today.

It seems that there is a conflict of interest in
the discussion about whois as a few registrars that are participating also
offer "private" registrations. As such it is obvious that they would
probably prefer to have all whois information as public as possible so that
they can continue to sell the private registrations. Nothing wrong with
that, but would those registrars that have private registrations care to
identify themselves?


Larry Erlich

http://www.DomainRegistry.com




Tim Ruiz wrote:
> 
> Paul,
> 
> I agree with Ross' comments below for the most part.
> 
> By severely restricted, I meant that it should only be used to 
> facilitate transfers, and only then until something better is decided 
> on. I was not arguing anything about the data collected or displayed.
> 
> But regarding that, I don't see a need for, or agree with, any change 
> to
the
> data collected or displayed, at least based on any of the arguments or 
> reasoning that I've seen or heard to date.
> 
> Also, I am only talking about direct access to port 43. I see no 
> problem with, and am not recommending any change to, the Web based 
> access to Whois as long we can continue to protect it from scripting 
> or high volume
access.
> 
> Tim
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Ross Wm. Rader [mailto:ross at tucows.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, March 30, 2004 8:44 PM
> To: Paul Stahura
> Cc: Tim Ruiz; registrars at dnso.org
> Subject: Re: [registrars] FW: [dow1tf] TR: IPC constituency statement 
> for Whois TF1
> 
> On 3/30/2004 9:13 PM Paul Stahura noted that:
> 
> > What happens with thick registries?
> > .com and .net will switch to EPP, and who knows, probably thick EPP. 
> > Do we get to choose "b allow registrars to manage the service as 
> > they
see
> > fit" by not providing them with the whois information?
> 
> I think this is almost a separate conversation, but my preference 
> would be to evaluate the utility of the thick registry model before we 
> permit the creation of any more. Based on the testbed experience, I'm 
> not convinced that centralizing customer data in this way without 
> getting the guarantees we all need from a legal perspective is 
> necessarily a wise thing moving forward.
> 
> To the point as it relates to this policy - registrars shouldn't be 
> obligated to provide the data to any party that can't guarantee that 
> the data will be treated in a manner consistent with the policies and 
> legislation under which it was collected.
> 
> > Are you proposing we be allowed to not give the info to anyone?
> 
> That would be one potential implementation. Or just to parties that we 
> have a relationship with. Or just to parties that acts a brokers 
> between registrars and potential licensee's or...
> 
> --
> 
>                         -rwr
> 
>                  "Don't be too timid and squeamish about your actions.
>                                             All life is an experiment.
>                              The more experiments you make the better."
>                          - Ralph Waldo Emerson
> 
> Got Blog? http://www.blogware.com
> My Blogware: http://www.byte.org





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