On Wed, 28 Sep 2005 10:04:36 +0200, Stephane Bortzmeyer said:

> So he can call upon the law of his country, rather than the law of the
> state of California or Virginia?

Quite likely irrelevant.  Some entity with a foobar.nu domain-of-convenience
is quite likely going to find a hard time getting onto a court calendar in Niue
unless they have a bit more than a domain name to establish jurisdiction.

Similarly for most other countries - the French court system isn't going to
want cases dropped on it just because there's a foobar.fr domain involved, 
unless
there's a French citizen or corporation involved - and at that point, the fact
that a French citizen or corporation involved will be the biggest point for
establishing jurisdiction.

Is there *any* court that will actually accept "But alldomains.com sold me a
domain name" as sufficient grounds *by itself* for establishing jurisdiction?

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