I don't think this is correct. If PGMedia can sue and win, then any other TLD operator would have a legitimate claim to do likewise. Therefore, it is the principle that is at stake rather than the specific proposals of an individual business. Is there an antitrust lawyer in the house? --MM John B. Reynolds wrote: > As for the lawsuit, a PGMedia victory would not establish "the principle of > non-discriminatory access to the root", but rather that PGMedia is entitled > to any TLDs it wants, irrespective of the rights of other claimants to the > same TLDs (e.g. .web).
- [IFWP] Is NSI a monopoly? Greg Skinner
- Re: [IFWP] Is NSI a monopoly? Milton Mueller
- RE: [IFWP] Is NSI a monopoly? John B. Reynolds
- Re: [IFWP] Is NSI a monopoly? Milton Mueller
- RE: [IFWP] Is NSI a monopoly? John B. Reynolds
- Re: [IFWP] Is NSI a monopoly? jeff Williams
- RE: [IFWP] Is NSI a monopoly? Milton Mueller
- RE: [IFWP] Is NSI a monopoly? John B. Reynolds
- Re: [IFWP] Is NSI a monopol... Milton Mueller
- pgMedia case was:Re: [IFWP]... jeff Williams
- Re: [IFWP] Is NSI a monopoly? Milton Mueller
- RE: [IFWP] Is NSI a monopoly? Name.Space
- RE: [IFWP] Is NSI a monopoly? John B. Reynolds
- Re: [IFWP] Is NSI a monopoly? jeff Williams
