Somewhere at the beginning of the 2nd century the poet Juvenal posed the question, "Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?", which
is Latin for "Who will watch the watchers?" Juvenal was actually riffing on Plato's "Republic" and with a good reason: The
question was, and still is, profound because it concerns a basic problem with the machineries of government and governance
and, by extension, applies to any authority that has little or no oversight.
In the IT world a great example of a lack of oversight of an authority is the situation that we have with Network Solutions Inc. (NSI). NSI is the domain name registrar that was allowed to have sole control over the .com, .net, and .org top-level domains
up until 1999, and for which it gouged the public with the permission and support of the Internet Corporation for Assigned
Names and Numbers.
In the last few days, NSI was found to be doing something completely and unequivocally unethical: Holding unregistered domain
names hostage and, once again, gouging the public.
Here's what the furor is all about. Let's say you were starting a new company and you were going to, oh, I don't know, say,
sell VoIP to retired sailors. You might have an "ah ha" marketing moment and decide that "callmeishmael.com" was the perfect domain
name. (I use this name merely as an example because it amuses me; someone currently owns it and wants $2,288 for it. Good
luck to them.)
So, with dreams of naming perfection and a subsequent IPO dancing in your head, you might well have gone to Network Solutions
and searched the Whois service to see if the name was available. Should you have done so you would have run up against what
others discovered: The name you just searched for was available but with a four-day "lock" on it set by Network Solutions.
This lock meant that you couldn't register the domain with a more reasonably priced registry service.
Moreover, should you not have ponied up Network Solutions hugely inflated registration fee -- $34.99, about four or five times
what most registrars charge -- you would have risked losing the name to a domain "taster", someone who snaps up potentially
valuable names the millisecond they emerge from being locked to resell at a profit!
But how would a domain taster know you were trying to register some obscure name? Simple, Network Solutions is happy to tell
anyone who cares to look what names visitors searched for: all NSI domain name searches were immediately registered on NSI's
special name servers, easily identified by the domain name reserveddomainname.com!
Comments (2)
RE: Watching the registrarsBy Dana on January 12, 2008, 1:07 amAnother anti-business, anti-capitalism rant. *YAWN* Yes, NSI’s (Network Solutions, Inc) fees are high, taken in the context of the initial monetary outlay. In...
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NSI is Great if you like spending $$$.By Anonymous on January 14, 2008, 1:15 pmNSI's prices ARE high. In many cases double or triple the prices of other registrars. I have lost domain registrations on NSI from my first search to payment within...
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