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[nc-whois] background for GA meeting
I'm currently preparing some brief background information for the
sessions which are going to happen during the GA in Shanghai; among
these sessions will be a presentation of the WHOIS task force.
If you have any issues with the attached draft, please let me know
ASAP.
--
Thomas Roessler <roessler@does-not-exist.org>
Title: DNSO GA in Shanghai - WHOIS
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DNSO General Assembly
Shanghai Meeting, 29 October 2002
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WHOIS Task Force Update
Last updated: 2002-10-13
WHOIS access - i.e., public access to domain name holders' identities
and addresses - is being provided by both registries and registrars.
For gTLD registrars, the current policy is
contained in the Registrar Accreditation Agreement. The current policy's
requirements:
- Query-based access, on the registrar's own cost. This
access is available for everyone, and the data obtained may be used for
any lawful purpose, with the exceptions of spamming and automated high-volume
processes which may affect registrars' and registries' systems.
Data elements made available include the registrant's name and
address, and the contacts' names, addresses, telephone and fax numbers,
and e-mail addresses.
- Bulk access, for an annual fee not to exceed $10,000.
This kind of access is available to everyone who is willing to sign a
bulk access agreement with the registrar. Once again, data may be used
for any lawful purpose, with the exceptions of spamming and automated high-volume
processes. Additionally, the registrar may forbid the further sale and
distribution of bulk WHOIS data by data recipients.
Registrars may give individual
registrants an opportunity to opt out of marketing use of their data when
made available through bulk access.
For gTLD registries, WHOIS policy is contained in a variety of agreements
and their appendixes. Generally speaking, the conditions under which
data are made available mirror query-based access on the registrar level.
Bulk access is only available for the provision of an improved query-based
service, and to an ICANN-assigned service provider.
Data elemnts vary between TLDs: In the so-called "thin registry
model" (.com, .net, .org), the registry WHOIS only makes a referral to
the registrar of record available. In the so-called "thick registry model"
(all new gTLDs), the registry WHOIS itself contains the complete data made
available by registrars, plus the registrant's phone and fax numbers and
e-mail address.
Some thick registries are planning or have implemented advanced search
services.
In summer 2001, the Names Council's WHOIS Task Force has conducted
a non-representative
survey. The survey's
results and some preliminary recommendations have been published at
ICANN's Bucharest meetings. The Task Force has solicited public comments
on its report. The comments received so far are available from the
DNSO's web site.
The Task Force has also had conversations with a number of stakeholders
during telephone conferences.
The Task Force has since Bucharest focused its efforts on four areas
of concern, which were addressed by sub-groups of the Task Force:
- Accuracy of WHOIS data: How can current contractual provisions
on the accuracy of WHOIS data better be enforced?
- Uniformity of data formats and data elements across TLDs.
- Extended search services.
- Bulk access and marketing use.
The results of the Force's work on these topics will be published in
an interim report, and will be presented and discussed at the General Assembly
meeting in Shanghai. |
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Contact: Thomas Roessler <roessler@does-not-exist.org>
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