Don't forget to check out http://auda.org.au/domain-news/ for a more recent 
edition of the complete domain news, including an RSS feed - already online!

And see my website - http://technewsreview.com.au/ - for regular updates in 
between postings.


**********************************************************

Sponsored by the Singapore Internet Research Centre
Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
http://www.ntu.edu.sg/sci/sirc/

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No LDN in .co.uk
http://www.bbc.co.uk/london/content/articles/2007/04/20/domain_name_feature.shtml

us: The Best and Worst Internet Laws by Eric Goldman
http://www.informit.com/articles/article.asp?p=717374&rl=1

au: Tina Arena evicts cybersquatters
http://thewest.com.au/aapstory.aspx?StoryName=376309

de: Report on the state of .de ("Modern Communication is spelled with .de")
http://www.denic.de/en/denic/presse/press_81.html (news release)
http://www.denic.de/media/pdf/broschueren/DENIC-Image.pdf (report)

Munich has the most .de domains per resident
http://www.heise.de/english/newsticker/news/88799

RegisterFly fire sale at hand?
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/04/25/cogit_registerfly_purchase/

uk: Nominet and Oxford Brookes team up to fight domain name fraud
http://www.itpro.co.uk/news/111425/nominet-and-oxford-brookes-team-up-to-fight-domain-name-fraud.html

*****************
GOVERNANCE
*****************
The best way to give the poor a real voice is through a world parliament
[This article doesn't deal with internet governance, but for those interested 
in governance, this article could be interesting.] Global governance as it 
stands is tyranny speaking the language of democracy. We need a directly 
elected assembly says George Monbiot. It was first proposed, as far as I can 
discover, in 1842, by Alfred Tennyson. Since then the idea has broken the 
surface and sunk again at least a dozen times. But this time it could start to 
swim. The demand for a world parliament is at last acquiring some serious 
political muscle. The campaign for a UN parliamentary assembly is being 
launched this week on five continents. It is backed by nearly 400 MPs from 70 
countries, a long and eclectic list of artists and intellectuals.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,2063921,00.html

**********************
DOMAIN NAMES
**********************
No LDN in .co.uk
London can feel like a country in its own right. Our city could stake a claim 
for being the global capitals of finance, media, the arts, retail, sport, 
fashion... the list could go on and on. So why not have our own domain name? 
www.good-idea.ldn? ... So what about London getting its own TLD name, '.ldn'? 
As the global city par excellence, the idea surely merits serious 
consideration. After all, you do not need to be British to call yourself a 
fully-fledged Londoner, so using '.co.uk', may not have the same appeal that 
'.ldn' could have.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/london/content/articles/2007/04/20/domain_name_feature.shtml

us: The Best and Worst Internet Laws by Eric Goldman
Over the past dozen years, the lure of regulating the Internet has proven 
irresistible to legislators. For example, in the 109th Congress, almost 1,100 
introduced bills referenced the word Internet, and hundreds of Internet laws 
have been passed by Congress and the states. This legislative activity is now 
large enough to identify some winners and losers. In the spirit of good fun, 
Eric Goldman offers an opinionated list of personal votes for the best and 
worst Internet statutes in the United States. One of the "Effective but 
Questionable Internet Laws" Goldman mentioned is the Anti-Cybersquatting 
Consumer Protection Act. One of the "Worst Internet Laws" was the Dot Kids 
Implementation and Efficiency Act of 2002.
http://www.informit.com/articles/article.asp?p=717374&rl=1

au: Tina Arena evicts cybersquatters
Australian songstress Tina Arena has wrested an internet domain bearing her 
name from cyber-squatters in a decision that could help other entertainers 
assert their presence online. ... Presiding panelist Sara Delpopolo said the 
respondent's domain name was identical to Arena's trade name, that Enigmatic 
had no legitimate interest in the domain and that the company had registered 
the site in bad faith.
http://thewest.com.au/aapstory.aspx?StoryName=376309
http://www.news.com.au/entertainment/story/0,10221,21617015-7484,00.html

Aussies lose domains in Web host scandal
An unknown number of Australian companies and consumers have lost their Web 
sites -- and renewal fees -- hosted by RegisterFly.
http://zdnet.com.au/news/software/soa/Aussies-lose-domains-in-Web-host-scandal/0,130061733,339275006,00.htm

de: Denic report on the state of .de ("Modern Communication is spelled with 
.de")
Denic have released a report on the state of domain names for .de up to the end 
of 2006. The report is very comprehensive. On the distribution of domain names, 
this varies widely throughout Germany. Munich city has the highest density of 
domain names, closely followed by Nürnberg, Bonn, Munich State and Düsseldorf. 
In centres of industry there are higher registrations than in rural areas, and 
registrations are higher in the western than in the eastern part of Germany. 
Comparing Bundesland (states), more domains are registered in Hamburg per 
capita, followed by Berlin, Hessen and Bayern. On a city-by-city comparison, 
the most domain names are registered in Berlin, followed by Hamburg and Munich. 
Approximately 80% of domains are registered to individuals and 580,000 (around 
6%) registered outside of Germany as of end 2006.
http://www.denic.de/en/denic/presse/press_81.html (news release)
http://www.denic.de/media/pdf/broschueren/DENIC-Image.pdf (report)

Munich has the most .de domains per resident
According to the annual statistics published by the DeNIC registry, Munich has 
the most domains per inhabitant of any German city. The 1.26 million 
inhabitants of the capital of Bavaria owned 355,737.de domains at the end of 
2006, 282 per 1000 residents. Nuremberg and Bonn came in second and third. Of 
all towns and counties, the County of Saale-Holzland in the State of Thüringen 
had the greatest increase in the number of domains from 2005 to 2006. At the 
end of 2006, the county had registered 9,195 .de domains, almost 72 percent 
more than at the end of 2005.
http://www.heise.de/english/newsticker/news/88799
http://www.telecom.paper.nl/news/article.aspx?id=165656&nr= (reg req'd)

RegisterFly fire sale at hand?
Could troubled domain registrar RegisterFly be up for sale? The Register has 
seen a copy of a letter of intent from Cogit, a technology-focused consulting 
group based in New Jersey, offering to buy out RegisterFly’s CEO and sole 
shareholder Kevin Medina for $1.15 mil. Whether or not Medina has indicated any 
interest in selling is another matter, and there is a continuing cloud of 
litigation over the struggling company that could hamper any attempted sale.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/04/25/cogit_registerfly_purchase/

uk: Nominet and Oxford Brookes team up to fight domain name fraud
UK domain name registrar Nominet and Oxford Brookes University have teamed up 
to develop technology designed to stamp out fraudulent abuse of domain names in 
the UK. The UK registrar will use advanced data mining and visualisation 
techniques researched by the university to develop algorithms and software 
tools that can help detect fraudulent use of the .uk.
http://www.itpro.co.uk/news/111425/nominet-and-oxford-brookes-team-up-to-fight-domain-name-fraud.html
http://theinquirer.net/default.aspx?article=39169

Another domain name, '.biz,' raises fees (AP)
Another week, another price increase in Internet addresses. This time, it's 
".biz" whose fees are going up.
http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2007/04/26/1177459798572.html
http://www.circleid.com/posts/top_level_domain_price_rise_biz/

Telnic Registry-Level Fee Amendment
Letter to ICANN requesting the Sponsored TLD Registry Operator Agreement 
between ICANN and Telnic be amended to provide for the identical Registry-Level 
Fee terms as were recently approved for mTLD.
http://icann.org/correspondence/price-to-pritz-13apr07.pdf

NeuStar Notice of Price Increase
A customer advice notifying that as of October 19, 2007 at 00:00:00 GMT, all 
transactions processed in .BIZ will incur a $6.42 fee per domain year with the 
exception of the Redemption Grace Period (RGP) fees, which will remain 
unchanged. This amount includes all registry fees due to ICANN.
http://icann.org/correspondence/tindal-to-schwartz-17apr07.pdf

A More Corporate Clean Slate
A growing number of college researchers, worried that the Internet’s underlying 
architecture will hamstring its development, are arguing that the ‘Net is in 
need of a fresh start. It’s not always clear precisely what such a “clean 
slate” approach would entail, but institutions like Carnegie Mellon and 
Stanford Universities are embarking on efforts to find out.
http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/index.php?id=2017

Legal: Your Domain Is At Risk
The lawyers at my firm represent registrars. We also represent domain name 
owners. And we sometimes represent domain name thieves (yes, everyone is 
entitled to an attorney). Here is an insider's perspective on the new dynamics 
at play in domain name cybersquatting. Most domain owners think their registrar 
is licensed by some governmental agency with oversight responsibilities. That's 
not really the case. The due diligence of ICANN and registries in approving 
registrars is virtually nonexistent. All it takes to become a registrar is 
payment of the $10,000 fee. Yet my impression is that consumers take from the 
registrars a false sense of comfort — as if their mere existence ensures domain 
names will be protected.
http://www.practicalecommerce.com/articles/466/Legal-Your-Domain-Is-At-Risk/

Protecting Your Domain Name: Get your .com and addresses that are similar (Nov 
06)
Domain names are addresses. But, of course, a domain name generates traffic, 
which means it is also a major sales source. The traffic could result from 
those typing in your name in the address bar of the browser, or it could be 
from search engines grading your website higher because of the close 
relationship between a search and your domain name. The value is self-evident. 
Yet, rarely do we find clients with a clear understanding of how to protect 
this asset. There are state and federal laws that protect a domain name if you 
are using it to identify your goods or services. But there are some common 
sense, easy and inexpensive steps you can take to protect this asset: Make sure 
you “own” the name; Make sure you get the .com; Buy the common misspellings; 
Monitor the web and Buy domain names.
http://www.practicalecommerce.com/articles/341/Protecting-Your-Domain-Name/

Protecting Your Trademark From Web Thieves: How trademark infringement happens, 
and how to stop it
How valuable is your business or product name? Most small and mid-size 
businesses aren’t aware of the value of protecting trademarks. When the focus 
is on making payroll, monitoring sales, providing quality customer service and 
reaching financial projections, it might not seem like a top priority to police 
the web for thieves. However, it ought to be. Others steal your name to hurt 
you. Such theft has an immediate impact on your sales, retentions and service 
costs — which pounds your bottom line. So, as someone who represents both the 
infringed and the infringers on a regular basis, I offer the following comments.
http://www.practicalecommerce.com/articles/450/Protecting-Your-Trademark-From-Web-Thieves/

Maintain reign over your domain
Whether it serves as your business's indispensable catalog of services or 
simply announces you to the universe, your Web site is important. Its content 
and design are likely paramount in your thoughts, but the single most telling 
element of any Web site for visitors is its domain name. These tips will help 
you keep tight control of your domain. The tips are headed Avoid shady 
registrars; Get a registrar with a spine; Own your domain; Lock your domain; 
Block squatters and Who's who on the Web: Make the most of WhoIs tools.
http://pcworld.ca//news/article/0f3eee3a0a01040801fdf17ca9648d62/pg1.htm

Domaining & Subdomaining In The Local Space - Part 1
Locals Only - A Column From Search Engine Land The practices of domaining and 
subdomaining have steadily grown into increasingly hot topics in the local 
search marketing space for the past few years. "Domaining" is the practice of 
buying domains mainly for their potential keyword value. Speculators purchase 
keyword domains with a view towards selling those properties at considerable 
markup, and/or using those domains to host relevant affiliate content links 
and/or contextual ads to derive profit from the traffic, clicks, and purchases 
resulting from the users who arrive at the sites by typing their URLs directly 
into browser address fields. Subdomaining is the practice of delivering 
sections of content on sites under third-level domain names.
http://searchengineland.com/070423-154346.php

Domain "type ins" represent more eyeballs than American Idol
Daily visitor count for all combined domain names DWARFS American Idol and the 
buying power is off the chart. This does not even include type ins to brands 
like Microsoft.com, Dell.com, Amazon.com, Costco.com and millions of other 
companies. These are just generic, keyword domain names from visitors looking 
for something specific. You have their UNDIVIDED attention. Why is that 
important? Read on!
http://www.ricksblog.com/my_weblog/2007/04/domain_type_ins.html

ICANN is the USSR of the internet - Karl Auerbach speaks out
Interview: Karl Auerbach, the last publicly elected board member at ICANN, has 
been involved with internet development almost since the inception of the 
internet itself, and served as North America's direct representative on ICANN's 
Board of Directors. Always the iconoclast on the ICANN Board of Directors - and 
with the Lisbon meeting now squarely in the rear view mirror - we thought 
Auerbach would have some interesting things to say about recent developments at 
the controversial group that runs the internet we all know and love.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/04/24/icann_auerbach_interview_lisbon/

Recovering Our Web Address
Yesterday American Thinker suffered a temporary loss of control of our internet 
domain. As a result, readers were unable to reach us, and we were unable to 
post new content to the site. The disruption lasted close to 24 hours, but has 
now been ended. Readers around the world will be able to find us as the change 
is propagated through the world's network of servers. We were victims of a 
company operating under the name registerfly.com which took our money to 
register the domain for two years, but only paid for one year.
http://americanthinker.com/2007/04/recovering_our_web_address.html

Verizon hits tiny iREIT with cybersquatting suit
One of the country's largest cellphone service providers has filed a federal 
trademark lawsuit against a small Houston company over what is known in the 
online industry as "cybersquatting."
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18304082/

uk: BNP attacks right wing from left field
This is hardly BNP Paribas' finest hour. Back in January, the French banking 
giant got itself into a right flap about a disaffected British National Party 
supporter running a website at the address www.bnp.net.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2007/04/12/ccdiary12.xml

The EU weaves itself a fantastically tangled web
Viviane Reding, the EU's media commissioner, was last week trumpeting the 
success, since it was launched last year, of the EU's own internet "top-level 
domain name" ".eu". "After just one year," she crowed, ".eu has become a 
well-established part of Europe's cyberspace." She announced that since last 
April its 2.5 million registrations have been exceeded in Europe only by our 
".uk" and Germany's ".de", ranking it as the seventh most popular web address 
on the planet. What Miss Reding did not reveal was that up to four-fifths of 
these registrations are, in effect, something of a sham; and that the new 
address has thrown large parts of the European Commission's own Europa website, 
one of the biggest in the world, into chaos.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/04/15/nbook15.xml

Looking to Profit From a Tragedy
Before the world even knew Seung-Hui Cho's name Monday, someone had already 
registered the Web site domain name vtechkilling.com.
http://abcnews.go.com/Nightline/VATech/story?id=3060386

ICANN Formalizes Relationships with .am Manager
Proposes an Accountability Framework document and signs an exchange of letters 
to formalise the relationship with ICANN.
http://webhosting.info/news/1/icann-formalizes-relationships-with-.am-manager_0420079221.htm

Create .xxx domain - It makes sense to corral pornography sites on the Internet
ICANN has missed a chance to deal with the messy stream of pornography that, 
for many, fouls the online experience.
http://democratandchronicle.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070423/OPINION04/704230307/1041/OPINION

us: Schumacher Furs goes to court over protests
As Schumacher Furs readies to move out of downtown Portland, its owners have 
filed for a preliminary injunction to keep raucous anti-fur demonstrators from 
interfering with their customers, doorway and Web site. ... The motion also 
seeks to prevent protesters from sending death threats or other threats of 
physical harm to the Schumachers or their employees or customers. And they have 
asked the court to prohibit protesters from interfering with 
schumacherfurs.com, the company's domain name, including misleading derivations 
of that site.
http://www.oregonlive.com/metro/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/news/117738154163450.xml&coll=7

us: Hub Mansion gets heat from Fla. hot spot
The owners of Mansion, the celebrity-soaked nightclub in Miami Beach, have 
slapped a trademark infringement suit on the owners of a new Boylston Street 
hot spot with the same name. ... Not only does Boston’s Mansion use a similar 
domain name - mansionboston.com - its description on its Web site is similar.
http://thetrack.bostonherald.com/moreTrack/view.bg?articleid=196841

us: Guard Your Domain
Today church security is about more than locking doors and background-checking 
workers. You also have to guard your website's domain name. Hope Community in 
Dover, New Hampshire, learned this lesson the hard way. In late 2006, the 
church switched Internet service providers, and intended to keep its decidedly 
religious website name. However, due to an error by the ISP, the church's 
domain name was placed for sale and purchased by a pornographic website.
http://www.christianitytoday.com/le/2007/002/2.13.html

Sas.Mobi flys high with easy access to travel information on mobile phones
To meet the needs of its millions of international passengers, Scandinavian 
Airlines (SAS) – the Scandinavian carrier – has continued with its tradition of 
innovation in air travel by launching SAS.mobi, the first .mobi site from a 
major airline.
http://www.irishdev.com/NewsArticle.aspx?id=5338
http://mybroadband.co.za/nephp/?m=show&id=6195

Domain Market Keeps Motoring Along With Trio of Six-Figure Sales at 
Moniker/DomainSystems
Most of the biggest sales you've seen charted the past few weeks have been 
finalized transactions from last month's Moniker.com live and silent auctions 
at the T.R.A.F.F.I.C. West conference in Las Vegas.  There are more of those 
this week, but the three biggest deals come from the Moniker Marketplace  that 
is open year round. Their power trio included #1 Jewelers.com at $150,755 and a 
pair of two-letter .coms, VD.com and XD.com at $105,574 each.
http://dnjournal.com/archive/domainsales/2007/domainsales04-24-07.htm

Patents.com Auction Grabs Attention
Patents.com and Patents.net have a high bid of $350,000.
http://domainnamewire.com/2007/04/24/patentscom-auction-grabs-attention/

American Customers To Get Free Domain Names (news release)
Dot TK, the only online service to offer free Web domain names, today announced 
one-of-a-kind service to customers in the United States. Dot TK will make its 
official debut at ad:tech San Francisco from April 25 to 26. Since its 
inception in 2005, Dot TK has added more than 1.6 million registered domain 
names and become one of the largest publishers' networks in the world, adding 
an average of 8,000 new domain names daily. ... With the Dot TK service, 
customers register domain names at no cost or for a nominal fee for special 
ad-free service. The paid domain names grant the users full license rights and 
enable them to run their own Domain Name System (DNS). With Dot TK's free 
offering, a customer's Web site displays third-party advertising.
http://sys-con.com/read/366464.htm

mobi-domains now cheaper
At .mobi there is now the phase of general registration, which made the 
mobi-domains cheaper - except premium domain names which are auctioned for much 
money.
http://www.businessportal24.com/en/_176618.html
http://www.verivox.de/News/ArticleDetails.asp?aid=49449&pm=1

21 Solutions to Save the World: Masters of Their Domain by Mikko Hypponen
Online banking fraud is rampant because it’s easy. Here’s a fix that will mean 
money in the bank. ... Why do banks and other financial institutions operate 
under the public top-level domains, like .com? ICANN should create a new, 
secure domain just for this reason—something like “.bank,” for example.
http://foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3798

'Internet Solutions to Register Domains directly with ICANN' (news release)
Internet Solutions (IS) has been awarded the ability to register domains 
directly with ICANN, making IS the only network service provider in Africa to 
be able to do so.
http://www.is.co.za/news/access/Internet+Solutions+to+Register+Domains+directly+with+ICANN.htm
http://networktimes.co.za/article.aspx?pklArticleId=4403&pklIssueId=622&pklCategoryId=204

NeuStar Launches Chinese and Japanese Language Domain Names In .BIZ TLD (news 
release)
NeuStar announced it has deployed IDNs for both the Chinese and the Japanese 
languages in the .BIZ top-level Internet domain.
http://neustar.biz/pressroom/announcements/press_release.cfm?press_id=1152

München hat die meisten .de-Domains je Einwohner
München ist nach der Jahresstatistik der Registry DeNIC die deutsche Stadt mit 
den meisten Domains je Einwohner. Auf die rund 1,26 Millionen Einwohner der 
bayerischen Landeshauptstadt entfielen Ende 2006 355.737 .de-Domains, das sind 
pro 1000 Einwohner 282.
http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/88754
http://www.computerwoche.de/nachrichten/591826/index.html
http://www.ngz-online.de/public/article/aktuelles/digitale/internet/431797
http://www.rp-online.de/public/article/aktuelles/digitale/internet/431797
http://szon.de/news/multimedia/aktuell/200704241350.html

München erobert bei Domainzahlen Spitzenposition zurück (news release)
DENIC-Domainstatistik 2006: Thüringen Spitzenreiter beim Domainzuwachs – 
Nürnberg schließt zu München auf - .de-Domains auch im Ausland immer beliebter
http://www.denic.de/de/denic/presse/press_81.html
http://www.portel.de/nc/nachricht/artikel/14510/

L’Icann se bat contre un 'registrar' indélicat
RegisterFly, le très controversé 'registrar' américain (organisme ou société 
d'enregistrement de noms de domaine) vient d'être condamné par la justice 
américaine à communiquer toutes les informations qu'il détient sur ses clients 
à l'Icann (International Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers), de façon 
à ce que cette dernière transmette ces données à la totalité des enregistreurs 
reconnus.
http://silicon.fr/fr/silicon/news/2007/04/23/l-icann-se-bat-contre-un

Nouvelles technologies, la guerre des standards
La Chine est devenue l’un des tout premiers acteurs mondiaux dans le domaine 
des technologies de l’information. Son objectif est désormais de réduire sa 
dépendance vis-à-vis des normes et des produits étrangers.
http://www.cyberpresse.ca/article/20070425/LADISCUTER06/70425062/5019/CPSOLEIL

Nom de domaine : le .Eu a son code de conduite
L’Eurid, bureau en charge du nom de domaine .Eu annonce l’activation du Code de 
Conduite chargé de chapoter l’extension européenne.
http://www.pcinpact.com/actu/news/35989-eurid-code-de-bonne-conduite-nom-de-domaine-.htm

La guerre du .NU se poursuit
ccTLD ou sTLD ? voilà à quoi se résume la polémique .NU qui fait rage sur l’île 
de Niue depuis 1 an et oppose le gouverneur de l’île au gestionnaire privé de 
l’extension qui refuse d’en partager les bénéfices.
http://domainesinfo.fr/extension/1187/ile-de-nuie-la-guerre-autour-du-nu-se-poursuit.php

Le Code de Bonne conduite du .EU est opérationnel
Souhaité par la Commission européenne, organisé par EURid, le Code de Bonne 
Conduite du .EU vient d'entrer dans sa phase active. Une bonne chose pour les 
propriétaires de .EU.
http://domainesinfo.fr/extension/1191/europe-le-code-de-bonne-conduite-du-eu-est-operationnel.php

2 miljoner ägare riskerar förlora sina domännamn
En bitter fejd mellan två av de anställda på domännamnsföretaget Registerfly 
har gjort att mer än två miljoner domännamn riskerar att tappa sina ägare. Nu 
tar Icann i med hårdhandskarna med hjälp av en amerikansk domstol.
http://www.idg.se/2.1085/1.104978
http://pcforalla.idg.se/2.1054/1.104978

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

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Sources include Quicklinks <http://qlinks.net/> and BNA Internet Law News 
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+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

(c) David Goldstein 2007
 
---------

David Goldstein
 address: 4/3 Abbott Street
           COOGEE NSW 2034
           AUSTRALIA
 email: Goldstein_David @yahoo.com.au
 phone: +61 418 228 605 (mobile); +61 2 9665 5773 (home)

"Every time you use fossil fuels, you're adding to the problem. Every time you 
forgo fossil fuels, you're being part of the solution" - Dr Tim Flannery



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