ICANN/Verisign Sued For Monopoly Abuse 209
Andy_R writes "The BBC is reporting that the World Association of Domain Name Developers (WADND) have filed suit against ICANN and Verisign for alleged violations of antitrust, conspiracy, monopolization and price fixing laws. The suit alleges that the two are entering an unlawful agreement that gives VeriSign a permanent monopoly over the all .com and .net domain name registrations, and the right to raise prices at 7% per annum forever. The text of the lawsuit is available as a .pdf from WADND." ZDNet has the story as well.
Is this why... (Score:5, Funny)
Solution... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Solution... (Score:5, Insightful)
They probably wouldn't. I know saying anything in a sarcastic matter-of-factly tone makes you sound witty, but there's not much merit or logical basis for assuming that the U.N. would make the same kind of abuses. The U.N. is not a for-profit organization, and U.N. commitee members cannot profit from such unethical practices. They don't have shareholders whom they are obligated to turn a profit for. As such, it makes them much more suitable for running a global communication infrastructure that's just as important to our global society as other shared public infrastructures such as roads and sewage systems. So if anything, these abuses by ICANN should make us reconsider the legitimacy of their monopolistic control.
Re:Solution... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Solution... (Score:2)
What's your point exactly?
Re:Solution... (Score:2, Informative)
Are you that dense? The whole scandal was about corporations and businesses bribing Saddam Hussein in order to get oil deals from him when the U.N. program restricted Iraq's oil exports to exchanges for humanitarian aid. The corporations and CEO's responsible for the scandal undermined the U.N.'s resolution. The key players who benefited from the scandal were Siemens, Daimler Chrysler, Volvo, atleast one Halliburton firm and more than 2000 other companies. It was a corporate scandal if anything.
"Companies
Re:Solution... (Score:3, Informative)
were arrested over bribery involving millions of dollars [telegraph.co.uk]
in which one U.N. staffer, Alexander Yakovlev, was convicted in a Manhattan federal court this past August [foxnews.com]
step down from his post Monday amid allegations that he and the governing [iht.com]
Bailey's Compass Sacks Three Execs In UN Scandal [forbes.com]
Germany Shocked by Damning Report On UN Scandal [dw-world.de]
More?
Re:Solution... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Solution... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Solution... (Score:2)
Maybe Republicans are on to something...
Then again...
I'm not saying that Democrats or Liberals have clean hands or anything, but to trust Republicans? You are right, where ARE the mod points for "scary".
Cheers.
Re:Solution... (Score:3, Interesting)
IC
Re:Solution... (Score:2)
Taking bribes from the most murderous living dictator and his regime (yes, even more murderous than ChimpyMcHitler Bush) in response for politcal pressure at the UN or...
screwing over customers with a government imposed monopoly
Re:Solution... (Score:2)
The Iran-Iraq war alone killed over a million people. You should probably diversify your own reading.
Re:Solution... (Score:2)
My understanding is that ITU would be administering things if the UN is in charge
Re:Solution... (Score:2)
And frankly, as valuble as the UN is as an open discussion among nations, it really isn't qualified to run anything. It tries give every nation, regardless of population/economy/technology/human rights/etc, an equal say - and lacks a means of enforcing its resolutions (be it economic sanctions or military). I fail to see how politicizing the internet, handing over its control from a tech-based non-profit or
Re:Solution... (Score:2)
Re:Solution... (Score:2, Interesting)
And at the end of the day.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:And at the end of the day.... (Score:5, Funny)
But then you'd be part of the problem, instead of part of the other problem
Re:And at the end of the day.... (Score:1)
Seriously, I know alot of lawyers that are also in IT in some fashion--programmer, net admin, etc. Being a lawyer who understands technology is great pairing of skills.
Re:And at the end of the day.... (Score:3, Informative)
I strongly considered this right after receiving my computer science degree. I actually have a friend who is going down this road. Nevertheless, I interned in the IT department of a smallish (but hugely successful) law firm one summer in college and befriended many of the lawyers in the office, including one of the founders.
Every single one of them recommended staying out of law if you desire to have any sort of life. It is very difficult to
Re:And at the end of the day.... (Score:2)
Sounds less like being a lawyer ruins your life and more like being a lawyer who wants millions of dollars per year ruins your life.
Shrug (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Shrug (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Shrug (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Shrug (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Shrug (Score:2)
DNS was expected to provide a label for a hierarchy of administrative domains on the Internet. From a purely technical perspective, it makes no sense to transfer the name of your administrative domain to some other schmoe. In fact, given that URIs and other persistent identifiers like message IDs and X.500 suffixes incorporate DNS domains, you generally do not want
Re:Shrug (Score:2, Insightful)
hm (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:hm (Score:3, Interesting)
mod parent up (Score:2)
Re:hm (Score:2)
Who says you need a domain name to publish stuff on the Web? Just about any ISP or hosting company can set you up with space under their domain name. Or, run your own server and publish the IP address instead of using DNS...
Verislime does many evil things, but I'm
Re:hm (Score:2)
court? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:court? (Score:2, Informative)
Closest thing would be the International Court of Justice [icj-cij.org] run by the UN.
Re:court? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:court? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:court? (Score:3, Funny)
What's worse is some mod rated an RTFA post "Informative"...
Mod must be new here too. They'll give mod points to anyone these days.
Re:court? (Score:2)
For monopoly and other related antitrust aspects, the two most active regulators, and biggest markets, are the USA and the EU. Without knowing the law details, I'd guess that the respective laws enable complaints against anybody active in their juridisction, no matter where the defendant i
Re:court? (Score:2)
show me the money! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:show me the money! (Score:2)
Re:show me the money! (Score:2)
Re:show me the money! (Score:2)
Re:show me the money! (Score:2)
If Verisign implements a 7% hike once a year, then the number you gave will be correc
Re:show me the money! (Score:2)
Re:show me the money! (Score:1)
Re:show me the money! (Score:2)
The reason most prices don't go up dozens of percentage point
No Chance they 'll get part of the Community Chest (Score:2)
Re:No Chance they 'll get part of the Community Ch (Score:2)
Re:No Chance they 'll get part of the Community Ch (Score:2)
Good for them (Score:1)
Of course, it's not like the money is going to go anywhere else than a lawyer's pocket, but in this case I don't mind that much.
We can only... (Score:2)
Should Cost Less Not More (Score:1)
already too expensive (Score:5, Insightful)
The price is already too high, in my opinion - companies like verisign (and other domain name registers) are making money by charging for something that is essentially free to create. For-profit companies should be kept out of domain registration - isn't that part of the point of ICANN in the first place?
Re:already too expensive (Score:4, Funny)
Re:already too expensive (Score:2)
--
get free domain names: http://www.ezyrewards.com/?id=23484 [ezyrewards.com]
I really wish I had mod points to mark this as funny.
Re:already too expensive (Score:2)
I spent a grand total of $2 for my domain. Works great.
Re:already too expensive (Score:2)
I agree and disagree at the same time. Anybody who produces a product has the right to charge whatever they want for it. If the market will pay high prices (and in this case, people do), why should they lower it? It's obviously worth the price (otherwise people wouldn't pay).
However, the DNS system is not really a product, per se. Verisign just happen to be in control of the root nameservers that everyone just happens to use. Fair enough, they have the right to charge anyone whatever they want for add
Sore losers? (Score:5, Insightful)
Hmm. Being a monopoly is not a crime. It only becomes so when abuse of monopoly power can be demonstrated. This does not look like it (yet), as there is a big difference between what you are contractually allowed to do, and what you actually end up doing.
Re:Sore losers? (Score:5, Insightful)
Let's see, ICANN abuses the power it have as a not for profit body to create a monopoly for a for profit business.
Yes, this does not look like abuse of economical power, it is more like normal corruption and abuse of *(political) power, that give jail time to the people, instead of regulations.
Re:Sore losers? (Score:3, Informative)
I think you are confused. The two different(?)groups suing ICANN (CFIT [cfit.info] and WADND [wadnd.com]) don't appear to have anything to do with the EU and their complaints about ICANN and the US government control of ICANN. ICANN has made many enemies over the years.
That said, the Verisign agreement may well be related to the complaints by the EU. Part of this a
Cheaper eh? (Score:4, Interesting)
What pays for the DNS system anyway, and why aren't domain names sold directly to the public instead of through registr[ars][ants?]?
Re:Cheaper eh? (Score:3, Interesting)
Cheap domains are bad, because for every one we get from an amateur, interested neophyte (like me), we'll get 3 spammers picking up cheap sites. A medium cost, and one with a reasonable rate hike, not an excessive one, would allow people with interest to get a site (while encouraging them not to drop something they paid decent money for), and stopping mass pickups of dozens of names.
Slightly OT (Score:2)
I was going to say that Verisign has quashed any competition with respect to the provision of SSL certificates, but it appears that there are alternatives available (some of them much more competitively priced, in fact- https://www.registerfly.com/ssl/ [registerfly.com] for example. However, I did notice that they use something called a ChoicePoint Unique Identifier. Due to the security issues with ChoicePoint, I find it rather ironic that they are issuing identifiers (purpose unknown) for something related to security.
Cheap SSL cert (Score:2)
Works in most browsers (test it if you're not sure!), and it's single-root, not chained-root (chained-root is a bit more cumbersome to set up).
(No, I have no affiliation, I'm not even a customer - I have a client who bought a RapidSSL cert, so I know it works fine; I didn't find Simple-SSL until after I'd already bought mine from somebody else.)
Re:Cheap SSL cert (Score:2)
Which side, again? (Score:5, Funny)
I can't see any UN involement here, so I guess we can safely be against ICANN?
Re:Which side, again? (Score:2)
What is there to say that WANAND won't turn out to be equally bad or worse than ICANN?
Re:Which side, again? (Score:2)
Re:Which side, again? (Score:1)
For a true patriot like you mister, this should be an easy one to choose from.
Yours,
JEFF REYNOLDS (AmericanFlags.com [americanflags.com])
http://www.wadnd.com/ [wadnd.com]
Re:Which side, again? (Score:2)
Right. GO AUSTRALIA! But ... what does Australia have to do with the domain name system ??
uh? (Score:1)
I hope it leads somewhere (Score:1)
Will that make the price drop? I think not. Will they pass the bill(fees) to the customers? hum I think yep
I hate it when an action produce an equal negative opposite reaction
But at the end we, the little e-commerce business provider will have
Re:I hope it leads somewhere (Score:2)
While Verisign is in charge of a large chunk of the DNS infrastructure, however, this will never happen, because it would take away one of their major profit centers. Sad really.
Double the rate of inflation!!! (Score:1)
Just like my property taxes and unlike my last few raises :( What did everyone expect though. We have a war to pay for damnit!!!
gasmonso http://religiousfreaks.com/ [religiousfreaks.com]Sounds like a bunch of fuckweasels to me. (Score:4, Interesting)
http://wadnd.com/ [wadnd.com]
Appears to be part of...
Targetedtraffic.com [targetedtraffic.com], who appear to be working with folks at the reputable-sounding domain names americanflags.com, revenue.net, golfcourses.com, ireit.com, erealestate.com, and it looks like they all hail from Delray Beach, Floriduh.
Congratulations, guys! I don't know whether you're spammers or not, but it takes talent to sound like a filthier bunch of domain-hijacking cockgobblers than the entire marketing department of Verisign. I mean, seriously -- I read those domains and was surprised when I didn't see any of you on the ROKSO list of the top 100 spammers. I actually looked. About the only way you could have looked like a bigger bunch of dirtballs would have been to have been based in Boca Raton, FL, or Slidell, LA.
I hate to say this guys, but even though you're not on the ROKSO list - after seeing who you're working with, I kinda hope Verisign/ICANN wins.
Re:Sounds like a bunch of fuckweasels to me. (Score:2)
From wadnd.com, the partial list of participants:
Two groups suing ICANN? (Score:3, Informative)
CFIT appears to be much less of "fuckweasels" to me.
Re:Sounds like a bunch of fuckweasels to me. (Score:3, Interesting)
Whatever happened to Godaddy's (et al) lawsuits against VerminSlime?
Re:Sounds like a bunch of fuckweasels to me. (Score:2)
Icann's Take - worth reading (Score:1)
slightly off (Score:2)
You will still be able to register domain names through GoDaddy [godadddy.com], Dotster [dotster.com] or someone else.
The biggest concern here for the rest of us, who want to keep it inexpensive to register domain names, i
What are the qualifications for... (Score:2)
I want to put that on my resume too.
Verisign/ICANN vs. Slimey Loosers (Score:2)
2 cents,
Queen B
Pedantic rant (Score:2)
Not to utterly nitpick here, but you'd think a highly reputable institution like the BBC would have journalists that comprehend that acronyms are capitalized. When one makes errors, such as improper spelling in a blog or in casual writing it doesn't bother me so much--but for some reason it really irks me to see BBC use "Icann" in a news art
Burn 'em. (Score:2, Informative)
off to a good start (Score:4, Funny)
Re:off to a good start (Score:2)
Or maybe I'm just not cynical enough yet...
Jw
Re:off to a good start (Score:2)
That's like saying (123)4567-890 or (123)456-7890 are an examples of U.S. phone numbers. They aren't. And swearing that they are makes these guys look inept.
They just as easily could have chosen 123.45.67.89 as an example, or better yet 192.0.34.163.
Re:off to a good start (Score:2)
Aah well...
Jw
Re:it is possible that... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:it is possible that... (Score:1)
godaddy.com is not a sub-registrar, it is a registrar. One of many [internic.net] in fact.
I beleive in 1999, NSI had to allow external registrars to register domain names and compete on price.
Re:it is possible that... (Score:2)
Re:it is possible that... (Score:2)
No longer true. Verisign did purchase Network Solutions, and sort of mangled everything in an anti-competitive way, but then got then got their act together and sold off Network Solutions to somebody else. Currently, Network Solutions is just another registrar.
Re:it is possible that... (Score:2)
Re:Monopoly? (Score:2)
Um, yeah, Verisign is getting paid. Your webhost (or you, if you registered the domain yourself) pays a registrar, and the registrar pays Verisign. As I recall, the wholesale price (what the registrar pays Verisign) is around $6/yr.
Re:v4? (Score:2)
/zing