Someone drew my attention to the same clause in NSI's dispute policy.

Isn't ANY registrar willing to simply agree not to revoke a domain
registration without cause?


On Tue, 13 Jul 1999 04:58:26 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (William X. Walsh)
wrote:

>On Mon, 12 Jul 1999 23:58:19 -0400, domainiac <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>wrote:
>
>>>Was it you or somebody else who put together a web page that does whois
>>>queries to the proper registrar?
>>
>>>If so, or whoever it was, does it work with whois.corenic.net ok? I'm
>>having
>>>some wierd problem with it that  don't get for any of the other whois
>>servers
>>>(with my whois.php3 class).
>>
>>yes I did it at http://domainia.org.  It is working with corenic (but slow).
>>Try fu**-you.com, it will show as registered to me but the record is not
>>complete as it does not show my nameservers, phone number, etc.  The name
>>was registered Friday but just showed up tonight.
>>
>
>You registered a name with CORE after reading their Dispute Policy????
>
>Any business owner who registers a name after reading CORE's dispute
>policy is absolutely insane.
>
>Lets look at parts of it :
>7. Revocation. The registrant agrees that CORE shall have the right in
>its sole discretion to revoke, suspend, transfer or otherwise modify a
>domain name registration upon thirty (30) calendar days prior written
>notice, or at such time as CORE receives a properly authenticated
>order from a court of competent jurisdiction, or arbitration award,
>requiring the revocation, suspension, transfer or modification of the
>domain name registration.
>
>So on 30 days notice, they can "revoke, suspend, transfer or otherwise
>modify a domain name registration" with absolutely no standard of
>proof or protection for the domain name holder.  I have to put my
>business' reputation in the hands of a company that includes such a
>absolutely insane clause in their agreement?
>
>CORE is going to make NSI look like a saint.

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