I think his issue is that the software shouldn't reject them as a 
special case, but rather it should reject them as taken.

i.e., if at 2 a.m. this morning, in a surprise announcement ICANN 
gave up the single-letter domains and released them to the pool, the 
software shouldn't reject them out of hand simply because the 
software "knows" they're taken.

D
(who would like to see X, the paypal folks, file a UDRP against ICANN 
for not surrendering x.com, since they're not holding it in good 
faith, and are cybersquatting on it)



At 11:51 AM -0400 9/27/00, Charles Daminato wrote:
>Single letter domain names are reserved by ICANN so you cannot attempt to
>register them (even though some are actually taken).
>
>Charles Daminato
>OpenSRS Support Manager
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>On Wed, 27 Sep 2000, Jeremy Bettis wrote:
>
>>  When I attempt a registration of a.com I get this error:
>>
>>    Invalid domain syntax for a.com (Invalid domain format (try 
>>something similar to "yourname.com")
>>
>>  Shouldn't I get the error: "Domain already reserved"?  I know that 
>>these are all taken, but they are legal domain names, for instance 
>>x.com is a real site.
>>  --
>>  Jeremy Bettis -- Hickman-Kenyon Systems, Inc.
>>  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>>

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