Domain Owners Lose Privacy
By Kim Zetter

Story location: http://www.wired.com/news/privacy/0,1848,66787,00.html

02:00 AM Mar. 04, 2005 PT

The U.S. Commerce Department has ordered companies that administer internet
addresses to stop allowing customers to register .us domain names
anonymously using proxy services.

The move does not affect owners of .com and .net domains. But it means
website owners with .us domains will no longer be able to shield their name
and contact information from public eyes.

The Electronic Privacy Information Center said the move violates First
Amendment rights to anonymous free speech. And the representative of one of
the largest domain-registration companies is concerned that customers who
have been victims of stalkers won't be able to protect their privacy without
changing their web address to a domain that offers anonymity.

Wired News has learned that the edict came a month ago from the National
Telecommunications and Information Administration, the Commerce Department
agency that advises the president on telecommunications and information
policy. The agency ruled with no warning and without any discussion with the
companies accredited to sell and register .us domains. The domain companies
were told they would lose their right to sell .us domains -- the official,
top-level domain for the United States -- if they didn't comply.

The NTIA did not return a call for comment. But it told registrars it was
not setting a new policy with the directive -- it was simply enforcing a
provision in a pre-existing contract that the registrars had violated. But
Christine Jones, general counsel for Go Daddy, the largest registrar of .us
domains, disputed this.

"This has nothing to do with them clarifying an existing contract," Jones
said. "We've been selling proxy registrations for three years; they knew it
but never said anything against it. They established a new policy, and for
them to say otherwise is pure crap."

The .us domain has been around since 1985. For nearly 20 years, it was used
exclusively by schools and libraries, as well as state and federal
government offices. But in April 2002, it was opened to the public for use
-- with the stipulation that domain owners either be U.S. citizens or have a
business in this country or some other direct connection to the country.

On Feb. 2, the NTIA sent a letter to NeuStar, the company responsible for
administering the .us domain and for accrediting companies that sell the
domain addresses.

The letter, obtained by Wired News, called on NeuStar to notify domain such
registrars as Network Solutions, eNom and Go Daddy that they should cease
allowing proxy registration for .us domains by Feb. 16.

The letter also called on registrars to correct existing proxy registration
information -- including name, phone number and postal and e-mail addresses
-- from .us customers and update the public Whois database for those domains
by Jan. 26, 2006.

The law requires that registrars deposit the name and contact information
for domains in the Whois database. But a handful of the 80-plus accredited
companies that register .us domains offer a proxy service, for a small fee,
that lets owners conceal their true contact information from the Whois
database. Of the 300,000 .us domains that Go Daddy has registered, 23,000
are proxies.

The NTIA directive applied only to .us domains, because the NTIA doesn't set
policy for other domain names, such as .com and .net.

In the letter it sent to NeuStar, the NTIA said its move was intended to
increase the accuracy and reliability of Whois information for the public
and for "law enforcement officials who rely on the information." It would
also allow the NTIA to contact website owners if their domain registrar goes
out of business and to transfer their domain to another registrar.

But Go Daddy's Jones said the NTIA's edict would not ensure that
registration information was accurate, because those who really want to
conceal their identity or true contact information would provide fake
information -- even if it violated the terms of agreement for purchasing a
.us domain.

She also said nothing about proxy registration currently prevents law
enforcement from getting the information it needs. Registrars place the true
contact information for domain owners in an escrow account, which law
enforcement officials can obtain with a subpoena.

It's possible legal action could prevent the NTIA and Department of Commerce
from having their way -- privacy advocates say the directive violates First
Amendment rights to anonymous free speech.

Marc Rotenberg, executive director of EPIC, said the Supreme Court has ruled
on at least four occasions that the right to speak anonymously is protected
by the First Amendment. He believes this allows individuals the right to
express themselves on the internet without having to reveal their identity.

"The government simply may not require people who wish to speak to present
their actual name as a condition of speaking," Rotenberg said. "This
tradition of anonymity is deeply rooted in constitutional history, and it is
very troubling when the U.S. government attempts to impose true-name
disclosure requirements on people who are simply seeking to speak online."

Jeffrey Neuman, director of law and policy for NeuStar, said the Commerce
Department was within its rights to eliminate proxy services because it is
responsible for setting all rules governing .us domains. He added that only
a small number of people use proxy services and would be affected by the
ruling.

Neuman said he didn't know why the government had not objected to anonymous
registrations before now. But he said the department discovered earlier this
year that registrars were offering anonymous services that were not in
compliance with its Whois policy requiring registrars to provide accurate
contact information about domain owners. Therefore, the department ruled it
should stop.

"The NTIA is saying this is not a new policy," Neuman said. "They never
approved the offering of proxy domains, and they're simply enforcing an
already existing policy."

But Go Daddy's Jones said NeuStar and the government knew anonymous proxy
registration had been offered since the company began selling .us domains
three years ago. She said NeuStar had asked Go Daddy at the time how it
intended to verify that proxy registrants had the right to own a .us domain.

"The old provision said you had to have accurate contact data, and we've
always had accurate contact data," Jones said. "They've changed it and
expanded it to now say there can be no proxy registrations. It's brand-new
language. So for them to say this is not a new policy is absolutely not
true."

End of story



You are a subscribed member of the infowarrior list. Visit 
www.infowarrior.org for list information or to unsubscribe. This message 
may be redistributed freely in its entirety. Any and all copyrights 
appearing in list messages are maintained by their respective owners.

Reply via email to