<<<
Chronological Index
>>> <<<
Thread Index
>>>
Re: [registrars] 100 year domain registration
- To: "John Berryhill, Ph.d., Esq." <john@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: Re: [registrars] 100 year domain registration
- From: Eric Brunner-Williams <ebw@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 06 Jun 2008 10:52:39 -0700
- Cc: Darshaun Nadeau <dnadeau@xxxxxxxx>, Registrars Constituency and observers <registrars@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- In-reply-to: <48496E4D.2030807@johnberryhill.com>
- List-id: registrars@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- References: <81DFF6B8-ADAD-4022-89D6-5790E3326A9C@gmo.jp> <53192563-F20A-4366-B93F-87733859CCB3@solis.jp> <48496E4D.2030807@johnberryhill.com>
- Sender: owner-registrars@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- User-agent: Thunderbird 2.0.0.14 (Macintosh/20080421)
John,
It was just this issue that got me to wondering about the way that
"stability of IDN labels" was being discussed in the IETF's latest "IDN"
mailing list, the words like "forever" in the IDN mess are simply hard
to related to the finite contract period for ICANN itself, and the
fixed-term contracts for gTLD registries and registrars. In the worst
case (that I can think of) some ICANN BoD could preclude itself and all
future ICANN BoDs from fixing some not-yet-known-to-be-broken bit of
character set detail, because some third-party (an IETF WG composed
primarily of people employed by printer and email product OEMs) put
"forever" (or terms wicked longer than our contracts) into some standard.
Stability of labels is better than instability, but it can be expressed
in small multiples of contract periods, assuming the requirement for
stability comes from a body defined by contracts.
Eric
John Berryhill, Ph.d., Esq. wrote:
>> Does anyone know if this violates any policies, rules,
regulations, etc.?
The ICANN-VRSN contract limits .com registrations to ten years.
http://www.icann.org/tlds/agreements/verisign/registry-agmt-com-01mar06.htm
"(f) Adjustments to Pricing for Domain Name Registrations.
Registry Operator shall provide no less than six months prior notice
in advance of any increase for new and renewal domain name
registrations and for transferring a domain name registration from one
ICANN-accredited registrar to another and shall continue to offer for
periods of up to ten years new and renewal domain name registrations
fixed at the price in effect at the time such offer is accepted."
However, that does not prevent any third party from offering some sort
of pledge to renew domain names subject to the prevailing terms of
renewal that continue to be available. Some years ago, I recall a
scheme whereby the service provider would set up some sort of annuity
fund to pay future registrations.
If the service is advertised as a "100 year domain registration", then
one might consider whether the terms of the service are adequately
described in a manner which is not deceptive, but that would be an
issue of consumer law in the relevant jurisdiction, and not an ICANN
compliance issue.
<<<
Chronological Index
>>> <<<
Thread Index
>>>
|