> > If we, is the US department of commerce, the answer is probably yes. > > The only operational significance, is that there is no way easy way of > estimating in advance the effect of removing valid DNS information from the > system, unless you are the administrator of the system concerned (and even > then mistakes happen - not when I do it of course<cough>). > > i.e. It may be that a nameserver called "ns1.example.com" supports domains in > a completely different TLD, like "example.co.uk", which belongs to an > important organisation or service.
Okay, so i am not talking about blocking or removing a name server. I am talking of removing that offending entry (like www.abc.com) from the whois database or whereever the central database is mantained. > > That said spammers routinely have domains, and nameservers, removed with very > little if any damage to legitimate Internet users. > > The real question is should we, words don't kill people, people kill people. Definitely! > -- -- Class of 2004 Institute of Technology, BHU Varanasi, India