We do have to proceed with due process; ICANN does give rights to the registrant which we can't blatantly infringe on because the contact information "looks" suspect. You'll find that an amazing number of email addresses actually work, and people clean up the rest of the contact information quickly when we bop them on the head.
Charles Daminato TUCOWS Product Manager [EMAIL PROTECTED] On Tue, 12 Mar 2002, Dave Warren wrote: > I'd consider that a victory. People that put bogus contact information on > domains annoy me, I'd be pleased to see a few of their domains get blown > away. If there is no valid contact information, then I assume the domain > would be simply deleted, since there is no official way to contact the > owner... > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Charles Daminato" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Sent: Tuesday, March 12, 2002 7:52 PM > Subject: Re: Whois info Required? > > > > You're not really "winning" anything though, as a challenge does not grant > > you the domain name, only the enforcement of ICANN policy (which either > > updates the information, as some of it may be accurate, or the domain is > > placed on hold/deleted, whichever is appropriate) > > > > -- > The nice thing about standards, there is enough for everyone to have their own. > > >
