A TLD that has been legally protected, via association with a trademark, may tell the
ICANN/DNSO exactly which dark place to put their policies, or which rope to PUAR. If
the theory holds. In other words, the jurisdiction doesn't hold water.
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of
> Michael Sondow
> Sent: Saturday, April 10, 1999 4:13 PM
> To: Int'l Forum on the White Paper; DNSO discuss; domain-policy
> Subject: [IFWP] Revised bylaw Article VI-B (DNSO subject-matter
> jurisdiction)
>
>
> NEW ARTICLE VI-B: THE DOMAIN NAME SUPPORTING ORGANIZATION
>
> Section 1: DESCRIPTION
>
> (a) The DNSO shall advise the Board with respect to policy
> issues relating to [top-level domains] THE DOMAIN NAME SYSTEM.
> (Scope of DNSO jurisdiction clarified in response to public
> comment.)
>