Hello Robert,
The funny part about your arguments is that they contain no amount of
reasonableness at all.
Do you point out, in LARGE type, exactly what the consequences of the
UDRP are to your registrants?
Do you make it 100% clear and in their face that the UDRP means that a
corporation can actually steal their domain without even meeting the
most basic requirements of the law regarding infringement?
The point is that disclosure is based on a reasonableness factor.
You don't like new.net, that is clear, and as such you want that
reasonableness factor set to 100%.
Well, perhaps someone doesn't like you, and wants your reasonableness
factor set just as high.
Do you tell your hosting customers that come from outside AU the full
story about the international connectivity problems that have been
plaguing AU for the last few months, and for which no fix is really on
the horizon for several months now? And that this means that their
sites may be inaccessible to users in some areas of the world
sporadically?
We could each go and pick apart each other about what we do or do not
disclose, but then you have to ask yourself, am I being reasonable?
I don't see much reasonableness in your arguments against new.net
recently.
--
Best regards,
William X Walsh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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