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Small Business Administration Objects to .US Deal

rlarner writes: "The United States Small Business Administration has written a letter to the NTIA that challenges the .US sale. The SBA claims that the UDRP and sunrise period were not properly enacted - they needed comment periods, etc. The letter is here." We've done a few previous stories about the handling of .us. Free registration of second-level domains under .us were supposed to go live shortly.

5 of 130 comments (clear)

  1. I'm probably going to get flamed for this... by mystery_bowler · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...but I don't think it's unreasonable to ask that the organization that doles out .US domains to give trademark holders a brief time to buy their domains. It's not like the sales of domain names would be stagnant, that's for sure, so no money would be lost there. And if a company interested in having their trademark with a .US domain doesn't respond in time (I dunno, a week? Two?) then tough luck. Resolve your cybersquatting issues in court, because you had your chance.

    --

    My sigs always suck.
  2. What do we want for .us? by crow · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What sort of policies do we want for .us domains?

    I would like to see them become widely used, but I would also like to see some degree of hierarchical naming enforced.

    I think all .gov and .mil addresses should be changed to .gov.us and .mil.us addresses.

    There should probably be a small set of foo.us domains pre-defined for which people could register bar.foo.us domains.

    mybiz.com.us (US business)
    myname.indv.us (individual)
    mybiz.com.ma.us (Massachussetts local business)

    Or should we require any .co.us domain to have one more generic level in the domain, such as cnn.news.co.us? That would cut down on the problems of namespace collisions.

  3. This is getting silly. by gpinzone · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why bother having new domains if anyone that has a ".com" is going to end up having first crack buying every other "dot" extension under the sun?

  4. Re:err another useless TLD by speederaser · · Score: 4, Funny

    Of course they care. There are probably hundreds of /.ers waiting to lock in the url all.your.base.are.belong.to.us

    The 1337 kiddies out there will want
    411.y0ur.b453.4r3.b3|0ng.70.us

    And what about toys.r.us?

  5. More on underlying legal theories by Froomkin · · Score: 5, Informative
    If you would like a more extensive discussion of the underlying US constitutional and statutory legal issues, please see my article Wrong Turn in Cyberspace: Using ICANN to Route Around the APA and the Constitution, 50 Duke L.J. 17 (2000), also available in tidy .pdf format.

    Here is the abstract:

    The Internet relies on an underlying centralized hierarchy built into the domain name system (DNS) to control the routing for the vast majority of Internet traffic. At its heart is a single data file, known as the "root." Control of the root provides singular power in cyberspace.

    This Article first describes how the United States government found itself in control of the root. It then describes how, in an attempt to meet concerns that the United States could so dominate an Internet chokepoint, the U.S. Department of Commerce (DoC) summoned into being the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), a formally private nonprofit California corporation. DoC then signed contracts with ICANN in order to clothe it with most of the U.S. government's power over the DNS, and convinced other parties to recognize ICANN's authority. ICANN then took regulatory actions that the U.S. Department of Commerce was unable or unwilling to make itself, including the imposition on all registrants of Internet addresses of an idiosyncratic set of arbitration rules and procedures that benefit third-party trademark holders.

    Professor Froomkin then argues that the use of ICANN to regulate in the stead of an executive agency violates fundamental values and policies designed to ensure democratic control over the use of government power, and sets a precedent that risks being expanded into other regulatory activities. He argues that DoC's use of ICANN to make rules either violates the APA's requirement for notice and comment in rulemaking and judicial review, or it violates the Constitution's nondelegation doctrine. Professor Froomkin reviews possible alternatives to ICANN, and ultimately proposes a decentralized structure in which the namespace of the DNS is spread out over a transnational group of "policy partners" with DoC.

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    I have a blog.