My take on it is that those who feel a registration is inappropriate can bring a RDRP action, and that this is the mechanism Nuelevel is using to deal with this type of thing, rather than aggressive registry action.
Besides, if they got aggressive about it, all someone would have to do is put up a meta search script or something at the domain name, and offer the domain name for sale still, to get around it. Monday, Monday, April 08, 2002, 2:26:05 PM, myOstrich Internet wrote: > So in the .biz FAQ, it clearly states: > "Registering a domain name solely for the purposes of (1) selling, > trading or leasing the domain name for compensation, or (2) the > unsolicited offering to sell, trade or lease the domain name for > compensation does not constitute a "bona fide business or commercial > use" of that domain name." > Now this means that the so called domain speculators were not permitted > to simply buy .biz domains and then offer them up for sale. Domains had > to be purchased with the intent of use in a bona fide business. > ICANNWatch in the following article > http://www.icannwatch.org/article.php?sid=661&mode=thread&order=0 > clearly identifies where this is happening. > Is Nuelevel going to do anything about this obvious breach of the .biz > purchase agreement? > Is this just another piece of toothless domain policy? > -t > -- > myOstrich Internet > http://www.myostrich.net -- Best regards, William X Walsh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- OpenSRS installation and customizations Payment Processing Integration Apache Installation and Support Services http://www.wxsoft.com/