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ICANN Moves To Disable Domain Tasting

jehnx writes "Following Google's crackdown on 'domain tasters', ICANN has voted unanimously to eliminate the free period that many domain buyers have been taking advantage of. At the same meeting they also discussed Network Solutions' front running but took no action on it."

8 of 137 comments (clear)

  1. KISS by Amorymeltzer · · Score: 5, Funny

    Good.

    (all other posts after this are either wrong or repeating)

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    1. Re:KISS by EveryNickIsTaken · · Score: 5, Funny

      Actually, IMO, KISS was highly overrated. Gene Simmons is a marketing genius, though.

  2. Is this really about domain tasting by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 5, Informative

    Or domain kiting? In tasting, customers register the domain for 5 days and use that up and then let it expire. In kiting, they delete the domain before the grace period is up and then re-register for another 5 day grace for the same domain.

  3. Re:Network Solutions by tritonman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yea I think they are full of crap. I tried this myself, I searched on network solutions for some random domain name like kljihsd2342.com, it said it was available, then I decided that I would maybe go with register.com (we do have freedom of choice right?) and it said the domain was unavailable, it was registered by network solutions. This is most certainly abuse of power.

  4. Re:Where's the tag? by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 5, Informative

    For those that don't know, Bruce Tonkin holds shares in Melbourne IT, which is an ICANN-approved registrar. Hence his conflict of interest.

  5. What is interesting to me... by bleh-of-the-huns · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is the fact that last night I was searching for a sprayfoam insulation company in maryland (using google), and the very first link that came up, was a domain taster domain registered 3 days prior to yesterday, that only had ads and click through sites on it...

    It was most annoying, but the fact it came up as the first link, means google really should do soemthing about sites abusing the ranking systems and not just people abusing the adsense program.

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  6. Don't worry about the name by Comboman · · Score: 5, Insightful
    It is so infuriating to have a good idea for a website, only to have 99% of the possible/good domain names being taken and being part of some advertizement network.

    If you have a good idea for a website, pick a unique, memorable name, not an obvious one. Who's the number one auction site; auction.com or eBay? Who's the number one on-line bookseller; books.com or Amazon? What is an ebay anyway? What does a river in Brazil have to do with books? Nothing, it doesn't matter, most people are going to find your website through Google anyway rather than typing in a URL.

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  7. Re:Overall a great decision, but . . . by SnapShot · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I understand your anecdote, but considering that a domain name only costs $9 I'm still on the side of banning the practice.

    ICANN says it pretty eloquently:

    Whereas, it is apparent that the AGP is being used for purposes for which it
    was not intended;

    Whereas, abuse of the AGP is, in the opinion of the majority of respondents
    whose statements were collected by the GNSO Ad Hoc Group on Domain Name
    Tasting (4 October 2007 report), producing disadvantages in the form of
    consumer confusion and potential fraud that outweigh the benefits of the
    AGP;


    In other words, your experience has become the exception (by a factor of millions) not the rule and a few bad apples have ruined it for the rest of us.
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