Network Solutions "Owns" Your Domain Name!
jvj24601 writes "A columnist at news.com reports that Network Solutions has recently changed its contracts -- it now 'owns' the domain name and can take it back at will. This has been held up in court. I am especially appalled that their agreement states 'NSI may terminate "domain name registration services" if the registrant uses them for "any improper purpose, as determined in our sole discretion."'"
Time to check the
DomainNameBuyersGuide again ...
i wonder how this will effect domain squatters who ut up chunks of names with the sole purpose of auctioning them off on ebay, holding them for "ransom", etc.
- Entertaining Bits from the Ancient Kernel Tree
So instead of using Network Solutions, every one registers with the other domain registrars. Who loses? Well, sure it's a hassle, but there goes Network Solutions' income. Darwinism is fun to watch.
I recommend Register.com currently, as you aren't tied up for two years, and it is really easy to manage your domain via they're web page. Register.com doesn't seem to me to have some of the problems Network Solutions has.
"You spoony bard!" -Tellah
Looks like I need to transfer my domains to CORE.
My blog: http://www.seebs.net/log/ --- My iPhone/iPad app: http://www.seebs.net/seebsfrac/
Any lawyers care to comment on what my options might be? Can I sue them, and if so, for what? This is a definate consumer-rights issue.
So if, at any time, Network Solutions or it's political constituants disagree with the position that you are taking on your website under their domain name, then they have the right to withdraw that domain name from you?
So who owns freedom dot com?
dc
--
Wooden armaments to battle your imaginary foes!
We should all get together and make our own DNS registration. Just like all the napster spinoffs, lets do a nameserver spinoff.
There *is* competiton in the .com/.org/.net domain registration business, after all.
.com, .net, and .org domains can now be registered
Though, when I think about it, maybe it's not obvious. Some people haven't gotten the idea yet.
[rs.internic.net]
Whois Server Version 1.1
Domain names in the
with many different competing registrars. Go to http://www.internic.net
for detailed information.
Domain Name: SLASHDOT.ORG
Registrar: NETWORK SOLUTIONS, INC.
Whois Server: whois.networksolutions.com
Referral URL: www.networksolutions.com
Name Server: NS1.ANDOVER.NET
Name Server: NS2.ANDOVER.NET
Updated Date: 08-feb-2000
as i recall, there was a web-based registrar rating site -- that lists the details of agreements from the various registrars, etc.
when my NSI expires in several months, i should just be able to transfer it over to one of the more forward-thinking registrars, correct?
i think there's one in san diego with a good rep.
Treatment, not tyranny. End the drug war and free our American POWs.
See my user info for links.
For instance, wouldnt it be nice if Network solutions could haul off and revoke all the stupid domain names that point to pr0n? (www.whitehouse.com springs to mind)
IF Network Solutions could be trusted to do the right, ethical and moral thing, this would also pretty much eliminate cybersquatting of the worst kind. But, as we have seen from NetSol's past reputation, they cannot be trusted to do anything resembling ethical behavior. (can you say "Sure, everyone can be a registrar, but we still own the master DB, and will enforce this when we please)
This poicy will be abused, not if, but when, and I truly feel sympathy for this little guy out there on the web who might be trying to make some money for him/herself and gets stepped on by big bad NetSol.
"See, we plan ahead! That way, we never have to do anything now."
what happened to the times when we used to say;
"aw, that's bullshit, that'll never stand up in court!"
. . . and we'd be right?
I just remembered this old Metallica song. . .
These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
it doesn't sound legal to change the contract terms once the contract has been executed? (IANAL)
--
--
"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
now tell me what this means:
"any improper purpose, as determined in our sole discretion."'
so now can they take back xxx.com becouse they put up child porn?
or
lets say i have weed.com and i tell you how to grow weed. and now lets say they dislike that idea. can they take that domain name back too?
or
what if Micros~1 gives them a deal on X number of copys of W2K in exchange for revoking slashdot.org
what then?
For all the domains I own or have bought for friends without credit cards (g) I went through Joker.com.
Fast, friendly, efficent. Gotta love it!
Pope
Freedom is Slavery! Ignorance is Strength! Monopolies offer Choice!
It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
This page summarizes the legal rights offered by the different registrars. As you can see, the problem with Network Solutions has been known for some time.
Thanks NSI! I can't tell you how much fun I had dealing with your ongoing garbage for the past 3 years! And to think my company has registered over 1000 domains with you guys for our customers over the past 5 years!
In using Tucows OpenSRS we have had extreme reliability, durability, speed, and low prices. Any ISP who hasn't implemented this service yet doesn't know what they are missing... Only $10/year per domain.
And for all you end users out there, don't miss out Domain Monger, who implement OpenSRS, and only charge $17/year.
NSI... How are you still a company?
EraseMe
I urge everyone to use other registrars. If NSI is claiming this on behalf of all domains in the Internic database, then a class action lawsuit is going to be needed.
.us and .(state).us for the United States, and .ca in Canada, for example, instead of the almightly .com. Here in Canada, at least, .ca registration is free to incorporated businesses and non-profit agencies, and also to propieterships if a trademark or name is established.
/.? Yesterday and today, the main server, the ad server, and the image server have sporadically been unavailable. Wired reported that there have been some DDoS's in progress.)
Alternatively, perhaps people should start using the location based prefixes... i.e.
(by the way, is someone launching DDoS's against parts of
--
Get your facts straight Siggy... the latest court ruling in the sex.com case in fact found that domain names weren't to be considered property.
The DNS system currently works on consensus, everyone agrees who the Top Level Nameservers are. We should simply say "No More", designate some new TLNs, and tell Network Solutions to stuff it. I am sure that some company, Maybe IBM would donate some computers to run the Database that would feed this. And we should host it outside the USA, since the Internet is International in it's scope today, and NSI has lots of money for lawyers.
ttyl
Farrell
CAN-CON 2019 - Ottawa's only book oriented Science Fiction Convention! October 18-20, Sheraton Hotel, Ottawa, Canada h
I don't mean this as flamebait, but we're all aware that there are other, subjectively better registrars out there, so we don't need any more posts telling us this.
--
--
Mod up a post Rob doesn't like and you'll never mod again
[...]
Domain Name: SLASHDOT.ORG
Registrar: NETWORK SOLUTIONS, INC.
Not that it means anything, but someone was going to point it out.
Just like Andover, I have a few domains registered with NSI that I'd like to transfer. Is there a good FAQ/HOWTO out there? I'm particularly interested in actual experiences and pitfalls to avoid.
Maybe next they'll argue that as the keeper of the DB they reallyown a.com, aa.com, ab.com, ac.com [...] zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.com, and you just happen to be renting a random string of alphanumerics?
SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
As noted on /. a few weeks ago this site compares services based on contract or price.
-
air and light and time and space
I am apalled that NSI would make this major a change without notifying the customers. The idea that a domain name is 'just like a phone number' is ludicrous! The court demonstrates a real deficit of knowledge about how the domain system works by finding that the name is a product of contract for services. Just the very OPPOSITE is true. The domain name itself can be registered with any registrar, and the services are contracted to support the use of that name. Under this new policy, you'd better hope you haven't already renewed. Here's a scenario:
.tv domain are auctioning domains for $1000 a pop. I will absolutely move to another registrar BEFORE I renew at NSI, lest I, too, tacitly agree to give away my company's property, which my company owned well BEFORE NSI took over the registry business. It's bad enough we have to change IP's when we change ISP's, but now we have to change domain names along with our registrars? Can they possibly get away with this for long?
1) Domain owner of extremely popular domain name X decides to switch to a different registrar and informs NSI
2) NSI pulls the domain name X from the owner, but maintaining it within their database, since it now belongs to NSI
3) Domain owner must choose a different name when switching registrars, because NSI wants to sell domain name X to the highest bidder.
I don't doubt they're miffed by a) losing their monopoly, b) the fact that other registrars, like the owner of the
These people looked deep into my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined.
From the article:
Domain name holders who registered their names under older contracts become bound to
the new conditions automatically when they renew their names with NSI for another one-year term.
And from there on out, all NSI changes in policy are automatic and don't even require notice of the contractees.
Returned Peace Corps IT Volunteer
Now that Network Solutions has decided to do this, this is what is going to happen next:
Business will drop dramatically from those who know what they are doing.
Eventually this drop in business will effect them so much that they will consider repealing this new clause to their contract.
Due to their way-too-big egos, they will not repeal it for fear of looking like idiots (too late).
To make up for lost revenue, they will start taking popular domains away for frivilous reasons. A few hell.coms auctioned off here and there and they make up quite a bit of money.
If people haven't moved away from Network Solutions yet, they will now.
Pretty soon Network Solutions won't have any domains left and will go bankrupt unless they decide to fess up and give in (fat chance).
- What do you think - sounds correct?
How would I go about changing my domain name which my ISP registered under NS?
I'd rather have someone respond than be modded up.
This implies (to me, at least) that NSI "owns" all unregistered names, too. If they "own" the domain then they must have owned it before, too, right? I certainly wouldn't create a name myself and then promptly give it to someone else for the privledge of being listed in a routing table. If you follow the logic then NSI also "owns" all domains registered through other registrars. At least according to them.
How exactly does this work? The only way I can see it (possibly) holding up legally is if when you agree to their terms of service you do indeed give them those rights, and I really don't think those sorts of rights are assignable.
Somebody explain this, as it makes no sense to me.
Right now I'm in a very weird situation. I've registered my lastname.com. Then this small company in US (I'm in Canada) have emailed me saying that it should be theirs. Of course I replied saying no way. I also don't want to ask for $$, because I'm afraid they can use that against me later. The only thing that worries me is that NS and this company are both in the US, so can they go straight to each other and transfer it? Would I then have to pay my own legal fees and go down the border to haggle for it? Shouldn't have picked NS dammit, but if I didn't I'm might have been too late!
No one is really going to be free until nerd persecution ends.
yet it appears that they can use their own info on their customers and send out 'the internet newsletter' (or whatever the hell they called it) at will.
when I asked them to remove me from their spam list, it took almost a month to have my name removed from their marketing distribution.
so keep it up, NSI; you'll lose subscribers faster than win98 crashes, at this rate.
--
--
"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
As much as NSI sucks, at least they get the job done.
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
This seems a little crazy on Network Solutions part, in effect ehy are saying the own all the unborn and unthought of domain names, that may be in the future registered with them.
Here is a scenario lets say I am the rightful holder of shmuckiness.com, and have been operating that business for a number of years. Now I want to register my domain name with NSI, i do that, and now they own it. Lets say I want to switch, or something happens (NSI's fault) were I no longer have that domain. If it is not used by someone else are they not, in some ways, acting as domain squatters???? They own and hold a domain that is under my copyright. This, although farfetched, should not be legal. Domain names are equivalent to online identity, they are not just phone numbers (i would understand if you made that argument with IPs, but domain names are like last names)
Have whatever registration co. you are switching to do the dirty work of transferring the domain over for you.
Most registration companies want your business so they offer the service for free. I recently did it. I switched from NetSol to DomainDiscover for this EXACT reason. I didn't like NetSol's crappy disclaimers and legal baloney. DomainDiscover ranked high on the list of good registrars as far as legal issues. DomainDiscover did all the transfer work for me and all I had to do was extend my domain name out another year with DD. No actuall transfer fee. One year is $30 USD, which may not be as cheap as Dotster, but for the mental peace of mind its worth it.
Surely this cannot effect existing contracts, unless there was a clause in the original contract stating that such a thing was possble.
Something like this would not be binding under Canadian law, but I know nothing of American law.
In any event, in Canada at least, you cannot make changes to an existing contract unless both parties to the contract agree to the change. The effect is that the old contract is voided and a new contract comes into being. The impression I get is that this has not taken place so how is it possibly enforceable?
And your proof of this lies where?
(Hint: "It's just something they would do because they're evil!@#!@" isn't a valid response.)
I've also seen this site around, which lets you register domains for free, provided you have a frame at the bottom displaying their ads: http://www.namezero.com/
--
--
Entropy isn't what it used to be.
This comparison should have been between an ip address and a phone number. You don't look up entries in a phone book by number, but by name, and you DO own your name.
I got tired of my ISP expiring the "legacy UNIX shell accounts" and having to change my email address and get everyone to update. My address is my identity. So I got my own domain name and host it on my own hardware. Now even if I move or switch ISPs. I just update my domain's DNS server addresses and keep my address. If NSI thinks they can yank domains for "any reason, at *their* sole discretion" then I want to transfer to another registrar. But there's no FAQ or info on how to do this. The registrars don't seem to like each other and without cooperation, domain transfers are impossible.
Other registrars have similar forms.
States that anyone who didn't use their real name, address, phone number, or email is subject to NSI revocking their "services." I seriously doubt that they could get away with say revoking, say, slashdot.org without due process of some sort (they may try, but
Furthermore, contrary to the article, i see nothing about this affecting you once you renew...
So when will we get an Ask Slashdot about how to switch registrars safely?
I hope that text isn't a copyrighted "trade secret."
So instead of using Network Solutions, every one registers with the other domain registrars. Who loses? Well, sure it's a hassle, but there goes Network Solutions' income. Darwinism is fun to watch.
But it's not Darwinism and natural selection. It's a very carefully and tightly controlled process of genetic manipulation. The unworthy need not attempt to join the game.
Not anyone can be a registrar unless they sign the WIPO agreement.
Wheather or not one agrees with WIPO, you must be able to smell the politics and power trips of ICANN. There's no competition or free market. ICANN is absolute dictator behind the scenes.
A GLOBAL internet ought to have GLOBAL registrars.
Differ with ICANN on idealogy and they won't let you play. Is this not wrong?
This seems very pro-big business and anti-little guy to me. NS isn't going to drop a big business because of the legal battles they could get into, but they can drop a little guy because he is "infringing" or "squatting" on a supposed big business name. Could a big business say, "I'll give you X more dollars than that guy so I can have that domain." and NS obey because their "sole discression" is to make money? Also sounds like NS is "squatting" on all the domain names if they own them. Can you sue NS for owning your trademarked domain name?
Furthermore, you agree that we may suspend, cancel or transfer your domain name registration services in order to: (i) correct mistakes made by us or he registry in registering your chosen domain name,
Does that mean if they "mistakenly" allow me to rgister WindowsME.com and M$ wants it back I lose it?
Hell, why doesn't the Virginia court just give NSI a license to print money?
In the recent discussion of "... for Complete Morons" trademark claims, it was pointed out that phantom marks are not granted, e.g., someone cannot possibly tie up in advance all trademarks of two words where the second word is "Services".
So exactly how much hubris does it take for NSI to claim that they own all possible domain names, present and future? I can't say that I'm surprised, but I can say that I continue to be disgusted by NSI's megalomania.
If NSI owns a domain name that *I* have a trademark for, they're in BIG trouble. Based on prior court cases it's established that it's trademark infringement to own a domain name which is the same/similar to a trademark. Oh, this is going to be fun.... ;-)
sigs are a waste of space
They claim they own the names now, right?
So if I try to transfer registration to a more legitimate registration service, they just say "nope, you can't do that -- we own it!".
What still confuses me is how they can say they own that domain? What if another domain name service had registered the domain for you instead of NSI? There is a serious logic-gap that I'm finding difficult to even explain here. Something akin to saying a phone company saying "every time someone makes a phone call, we own the rights to the conversation that took place on it" or a copy-shop saying "if you use our photocopiers to make copies of any material, we assume ownership to that material automatically!", regardless of the real author or originator of the material you're photocopying.
I don't think that I made very much sense there. Apologies. But it's difficult to explain something that is so absurd.
---
icq:2057699
seumas.com
I have a domain that predates NSI's spinout as a for-profit registry. I wonder if my status is different from that of those who registered afterward?
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
I tended to think that NameZero owns my domain, and they would probably have agreed. It would be interesting to ask them who they believe "owns" my domain now.
Well, there's Alternic.
There's nothing stopping anyone setting up root servers for an independent DNS system - except persuading people to use it.
Choice of masters is not freedom.
There are two problems here. The first is that there is a need for translation between 'human memorable' names and IP addresses. This means that something like DNS is needed. It doesn't have to be DNS.
The second problem is managing distribution of IP addresses. v4 IP addresses are meant to be in short supply. They're not. There are 2^32 (less a few) possible addresses. The number of Internet-connected hosts is 1-2 orders of magnitude less than that. The problem isn't a lack of available v4 IP addresses; it's piss-poor management of the available ones. One solution is hard - getting people (and, more importantly, routers) to manage v4 addresses intelligently. The other solution is easy. Move to IP v6. This will happen (probably very suddenly - all the infrastructure is in place).
However, mapping 'human-readable' names to IP addresses is the issue here. DNS is inherently a hierarchical structure. It doesn't need to be. I think that a truly distributed lookup system is more desirable. The obvious example (although I disapprove of both) is Gnutella versus Napster.
My suggestion is simple: The free software community should develop a distributed name -> address resolution protocol in conjunction with IETF. Conflict resolution should be handled with existing copyright law.
These are ideas. Please respond intelligently (I have enough hot grits already)
Not the cheapest, but certainly one of the best registrars out there.
You certainly would have an argument that you've established the common law requirements for trademark if you have used the address in interstate commerce... so register the URL as your Mark and you may be able to prevent another's use while this all gets worked out in court - hopefully to the logical conclusion that the domain is property as described in our original contracts. I need to go back and look at the language again to really feel safe, though.
Unfortunately I think anyone who purchases under the revisions is screwed, so go to a competitor.
Interesting that this applies only to for-profit sites... the requirements for trademark anticipate money changing hands by virtue of the accumulated good-will in the Mark. The arguments for personal sites and such might be better made under personality rights - identity control. Hmmmm.
Excuse me?
I seem to remember Network Solutions receiving the rights to *distribute* names, not *wholesale ownership of those names*.
What's $80 a year today may become 10% of Gross Profit tommorow. "Sorry, we found somebody willing to pay more for your business's identity. Too bad you don't particularly own that identity..."
This is a land grab; a damn subtle one, but a land grab nonetheless. NSI received the right to distribute names. By claiming ownership, they're assuming a far more valuable, centralized, and corruptable position--one which they have no right to assume.
Yours Truly,
Dan Kaminsky
DoxPara Research
http://www.doxpara.com
All a Registrar transfer is, is changing a couple fields in the SRS. That's it. Your NS are not changed during the process. The roots continue to hand out the referrals. There are in fact, only a few pieces of information in SRS: the domain name, the registrar's name, the registrar's whois server domain name, the registrar's web site URL, and the nameservers. Only the fields having to do with the registrar are changed during a transfer. The roots continue to delegate to the NS listed in the SRS, because those fields are not changed.
THERE IS NOTHING TO FEAR
(though some registrars charge a new registration fee to do the transfer - small price to pay, especially if your domain is nearing renewal time anyway)
Edith Keeler Must Die
in IP, personal names equate to dns host/domain names; and phone numbers are like the IP addresses. my telco or isp can change my phone/IP all they want, but I still have full control over my own name. and I control which name gets mapped to the phone/IP they assign me.
and NSI will learn this, I'm sure. this proposal of theirs just won't stand.
--
--
"It is now safe to switch off your computer."
that would've been a lot better with an editor (and a lawyer :-)
it's precedent
and the issue is hardly resolved, for sure.
--
+&x
I was pretty sure (back when i started using the internet) that at some point in time something was going to happen to fuck it all up. A good thing, unfortunately, is almost always a fleeting thing.
/. in the past couple of months?) Or perhaps the internet is just going to become so large that the signal to noise ratio becomes too much for everyone to handle. - But i'm starting to believe that "ownership" is going to play a HUGE role in this. - Anyone know why communism failed? Because it assumes that the populous is actually intelligent and knows the true meaning of the word "share". I think it's pretty obvious that most adults are about the same as a 2 year old in this area. They're just less eager to share different things. Instead of a Toy, it's now a Car. I'm becoming more and more afraid that the internet is going to fall in the same manner. Guys like Torvalds, Cox, and Gore (lmfao) - seem to be able to handle the whole "group" ownership thing. And for quite some time...i believe the general internet savvy public has too. But there's a paradigm shift coming - it happens when the same people that cut us off in trafic, the ones who take 40 items in the "express" checkout lane, the "general public" we talk about...becomes the average person on the internet. They can't keep the real world pristine...the internet's no different.
In this particular moment in time, i just realized what it is:
OWNERSHIP!
Perhaps the reason the internet became so cool, and so big, was because, in the beginning, a bunch of people got together and created this really cool network of computers. - No one really OWNED this network. It was just a colaboration of people, trying to do something they thought was good (for whatever reasons). (i know 500 of you want to correct me on the specifics of DARPANET...but you get the gist of it)
Now that every asshole has a computer, and every asshole at the head of every company realizes they can make money off these other assholes - Everyone wants ownership of something.
Blah blah, my domain, my ip, my this, my that! The downfall of the internet is that we're one by one, through various means, assigning specific ownership of all the various miscellany that is occurring on the internet. Something's got to give.
Perhaps either huge "megacorps" are going to spam the fuck out of everyone with banner ad us up the wazoo - and they can do it because they "own" something on the net that now allows them to do it. (case in point: how many stories of law suits or legal notifications have you been reading about just on
This "rant" has no direct link to the particular news article it is attached too. But, for the record, I believe that a domain name should be the leased property of the person it is registered to. No trademarks, no copyrights, just a leased name. when you stop paying your money...it goes back to the domain name bargain bin. - If I have an epiphany and think of some really snazzy domain name that's the next , I'll be fucking DAMNED if i shell out ~$70 and magically give it away to a registrar! NSI is never getting my business!
FluX
After 16 years, MTV has finally completed its deevolution into the shiny things network
"It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once." -David Hume
Maybe we can put the DNS servers on the open-sourced Iridium satellites...
Apparently NSI's agreement allows them to revoke your domain if you make any attempt to transfer it to another registrar. Not sure if they've ever done this, though.
in which case, you can't transfer any more than you can change landlords on a rented apartment, as the domain belongs to NSI.
If you've renewed, you're screwed.
It shouldn't be so hard to transfer away from NSI. With policies like that, no wonder they still think they can do anything they want.
The Virginia Supreme Court ruling overturned the earlier ruling by a lesser court that considered domain names property, but only under certain legal circumstances (in this case the plaintiff was attempting to use the garnishment laws to force NSI to transfer a domain), and deriving from a 1997 dispute. Be aware that this ruling will almost certainly be appealed to Federal court.
The US laws have changed since 1997 (in particular, S.1948 was passed Nov. 19, 1999) and in 1999 ICANN promulgated a Uniform Dispute Resolution Process for all registrars. This UDRP change is why NSI changed its contract, NOT the court case, even if they appear to be in concert. ICANN's goal is to get registrars out of the middle of lawsuits like this, unless they act in "bad faith", for instance by ignoring a court order.
It's an open question whether the courts will continue along the path of perceiving domain names as property, or follow the lead of the Virginians and define them narrowly as the "product of a service contract". ICANN and Congress have stayed out of this question, preferring to call domain-name "owners" by the terms holder or registrant -- while unquestionably acknowledging "owner" as the term for a trademark holder. Certainly the Virginia case is not only limited to a single state supreme court's interpretation (albeit the state where NSI is based, and whose authority is acceded to in the NSI contract), but it's based on a narrow case where the registrar was being forced to take action contrary to its policies then in effect. The new legislation and the new UDRP policy may nullify any need for placing registrars in such an awkward position. Even the VA decision notes that this question is unresolved and declines to rule on it, while stating that
Bottom line? The ownership of domain names, while acknowledge implicitly by the VA supreme court and even NSI, is not fully recognized under US law at this time
Choose your registrar carefully.
----
lake effect weblog
{Network engineer in Chicago--looking for work!}