Diane and all,

  I can agree that there should be some "high Water mark" on
how many DN's and individual should be able to register in
any given span or defined span of time.  The big problem with doing
this is who, and how is this determined so as to be reasonable, and
than what is truly considered reasonable.  This could be a big
new can of worms....  The other problem is that of enforcement.
How do you guarantee enforcement of such a possible policy.

Diane Cabell wrote:

> > >A proposed solution to the "cybersquatting" problem Mr. Crispin raised
> (one
> > >person registering tons of generic words and jacking up the price for
> the
> > >"real" users).  This is the solution that some ccTLDs have used.
> >
> > There are laws to deal with this... there are laws to deal with this...
> > there are laws to deal with this... this is a recording.
>
> There are no laws to prevent one person from amassing 200 un-trademarked
> generic domain names which was the scenario presented in the discussion.
> The discussion, as I understand it, concerns whether or not there should
> be.
> dc

Regards,

--
Jeffrey A. Williams
CEO/DIR. Internet Network Eng/SR. Java/CORBA Development Eng.
Information Network Eng. Group. INEG. INC.
E-Mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Contact Number:  972-447-1894
Address: 5 East Kirkwood Blvd. Grapevine Texas 75208


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