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EU Technology

European Commission Rules That UK Dwelling EU Citizens Can Still Hold .Eu Domains After Brexit (betanews.com) 98

What Brexit really means for the UK -- whenever it may end up happening -- still remains to be seen. But a new ruling by the European Commission means that even after leaving Europe, UK citizens will still be able to hold .eu top-level domains after leaving the European Union. From a report: The ruling is a reversal of a decision taken earlier in the year that EU citizens living in the UK post-Brexit would not be able to own such domains. It comes as the Commission becomes increasingly concerned about the "uncertainties surrounding the ratification of the Withdrawal Agreement", and what the implications of this could be. With the new decision, it will not matter where an EU citizen lives after Brexit. The only requirement to owning a .eu domain is being an EU citizen; it is possible to living in the EU, in the UK, or anywhere else.
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European Commission Rules That UK Dwelling EU Citizens Can Still Hold .Eu Domains After Brexit

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  • it was always kind of a dick move they were going to take that away for UK residents, I'm glad to see some common sense is starting to come about around this.

    Separation need not be so painful as both sides are making it... the sooner everyone accepts it's happening and works around it, the better. This is a good first step.

    • Separation need not be so painful as both sides are making it.

      I understand the EU's stance that "Hey, if you're not in the club, then you don't get club benefits", but it does seem like Brussels is going out of their way to threaten the Brits on this.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        The EU is terrified of other countries leaving, so they want to make it as painful as possible, by design. The more petty, the better, seems to be the reasoning.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Please explain how the EU is being petty. AFAICT the EU has given the UK way more leniency than these entitled pricks deserve. They were supposed to be out by now, with or without a deal, remember? The rules for the .eu TLD are that you can only have a domain if you're in the EU. The UK is leaving, which makes them not in the EU. What is petty about applying the well known rules?

        • Seriously no. They are not. Even in Greece, at the height of the meltdown, Greek citizens overwhelming had support for being members of the EU and the Eurozone. This is a fantasist sentiment that the Brexiteers proclaimed loudly, but it is pure bullshit.

      • but it does seem like Brussels is going out of their way to threaten the Brits on this.

        Oh the horror, the EU is enforcing a rule that we voted for.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Monday July 22, 2019 @02:50PM (#58967880) Homepage Journal

      UK citizens are still going to lose access, just not EU citizens who live in the UK.

      • In my opinion . . . Brexit is a huge, huge, Huge loss for the rest of the EU.

        A while back, I worked on a EU sponsored project with lots of folks from different countries. The French argued with the French-speaking Belgians about what time to take the coffee break. The Dutch-speaking Belgians argued with the French speaking Belgians . . . just because. The Swiss just took the money, and didn't do anything for the project. The Greeks came to the meetings two hours late, and wanted to open issues that had

        • It's unlikely that Johnson will ever get the chance to dissolve Parliament. It's not even clear that he can become PM, with enough Tory rebels preparing to side with the Opposition to bring the Government down. Constitutional convention in such situations is for the Queen to ask the incoming PM (in this case Johnson) to form a government, providing it can survive a vote of confidence. The Queen has a pretty clear role here to not plunge the UK in to a political crisis by having a Prime Minister in a hung Pa

        • In my opinion . . . Brexit is a huge, huge, Huge loss for the rest of the EU.

          I agree, it will diminish both the EU and the UK, but probably the UK more.

          A while back, I worked on a EU sponsored project with lots of folks from different countries. The French argued with the French-speaking Belgians about what time to take the coffee break. The Dutch-speaking Belgians argued with the French speaking Belgians . . . just because. The Swiss just took the money, and didn't do anything for the project. The Greeks

  • Brexit is saved (Score:5, Insightful)

    by fred6666 ( 4718031 ) on Monday July 22, 2019 @02:34PM (#58967806)

    EU citizens living in the UK (but not UK citizen without citizenship from a country staying in the EU) will be able to continue to own .eu domains.

    Now that this important matter is solved, what about the Irish border? Brexiters will need to understand that you can't have a no border and at the same time leave the customs union and the single market.
    If the border is not in Ireland, then it's going to be in the sea. But there will be a border.

    • Now that this important matter is solved

      Nice of you to make light of what could effectively sink entire businesses.
      Nice of you to think your concern is the only one that should get any attention from a very large commission that actually solved the Irish border problem only to have it torn up by the other side.

      • Major businesses who wanted to continue using their .eu domain probably switched to a EU-based (out of the UK) registrar already.

        UK individuals with no other EU citizenship (as it's the case for most people) or businesses operating only in the UK, will *still* lose their .eu domain when (or if) the UK finally leaves the EU. So if they haven't switched to .uk yet, I'd say they are gambling.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Now that this important matter is solved

        Nice of you to make light of what could effectively sink entire businesses. Nice of you to think your concern is the only one that should get any attention from a very large commission that actually solved the Irish border problem only to have it torn up by the other side.

        All of this started when Brexiteers decided that they could have their cake and eat it too. It's not our fault that the only practical way of achieving this goal involves eating your cake, shitting it into a bowl and then storing your cake happens not to be a very appetising process.

    • Now that this important matter is solved, what about the Irish border?

      Boris and Natasha Johnson get elected as Prime Minister tomorrow. Boris dissolves Parliament, despite their protests against it. And they imprison Moose and Squirrel.

      Boris declares a no deal Brexit . . . hard border between Ireland an Northern Ireland.

      Disclosure: The company that I work for has a lab in England. They do excellent work, and have outstanding employees. Steering work toward them used to be like going to the local grocery store. Post-Brexit, contracts to them will have to go through the

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The next few days could be critical. Tories defecting, possible legal challenges to proroguing Parliament.

    • Re:Brexit is saved (Score:4, Interesting)

      by TechyImmigrant ( 175943 ) on Monday July 22, 2019 @05:12PM (#58968904) Homepage Journal

      EU citizens living in the UK (but not UK citizen without citizenship from a country staying in the EU) will be able to continue to own .eu domains.

      Now that this important matter is solved, what about the Irish border? Brexiters will need to understand that you can't have a no border and at the same time leave the customs union and the single market.
      If the border is not in Ireland, then it's going to be in the sea. But there will be a border.

      Brexit is the seed that will lead to the reunification of Ireland.

      Just putting that out there so I can say "I told you so" in the future when it happens.

  • by WillAffleckUW ( 858324 ) on Monday July 22, 2019 @02:41PM (#58967848) Homepage Journal

    They're doing this because both Scotland and Northern Ireland will eventually return to the EU fold.

    Then they can expire the .eu TLDs in Lesser Britain.

    • They're doing this because both Scotland and Northern Ireland will eventually return to the EU fold.

      Then they can expire the .eu TLDs in Lesser Britain.

      Scotland isn't going anywhere unless Brussels can promise them to replace the monies currently coming from London. And not only is Brussels not going to do that, they're terrified of setting a precedent for supporting breakaway states. See: Spain and the Barcelona situation.

      • So long as the "breakaway" nations remain in the EU, how does that matter?

        It's like the US Civil War. You leave, you suffer. You stay, you don't.

        • "So long as the "breakaway" nations remain in the EU, how does that matter?"

          It matters because Brussels sees fracturing of larger states into smaller ones as contrary to their "ever greater union" stance. They want ALL of Europe, not just pieces of of it here and there.

          "It's like the US Civil War. You leave, you suffer. You stay, you don't."

          Way to really refute Brexit's "The EU is a hostile conquering power, not a voluntary membership anymore" talking point. You make the EU sound like some New Jersey mob pr

          • @DesScorp Not having lived in the EU and looking for some insight.
            you said "Way to really refute Brexit's "The EU is a hostile conquering power".

            Seems to me that was , 'sort of' what it was always meant to be , except the hostile part, I mean the nations did sign on voluntarily?
            What i mean is , it would be one thing if all they did was stick to regulating trade in a DIDN'T attempt to set up there own court system and enforce all kinds of other laws aka 'Universal Rights' across international boarders. To m

            • And that was one of the great things about living in the EU. Every now and then they would up and deal with whatever stupid new anti-being-human law the nation states thought up.

              If you want to call it a vessel state, it doesn't alter that it's a good thing.

      • by jrumney ( 197329 )
        The Catalonia situation was different - Spain was never planning to leave the EU. The EU has already signaled that they are open to Scotland joining the EU as an independent nation.
    • by pjt33 ( 739471 )

      Do you have inside information on Brittany seceding from France?

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Bad summary (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 22, 2019 @02:41PM (#58967850)

    "UK citizens will still be able to hold .eu top-level domains after leaving the European Union"

    No, *EU* citizens will be able to hold .eu top level domains. If you're just a UK citizen, you'll lose it.

  • Just like laws that require data to be in certain countries servers and geo blocking. I owned an .rs domain for a while despite not being Serbian. Geo restrictions defeat the point of the inter in internet.
    • Just like laws that require data to be in certain countries servers and geo blocking. I owned an .rs domain for a while despite not being Serbian. Geo restrictions defeat the point of the inter in internet.

      This isn't geo restriction. This is a private matter for a local registry office. You owned an .rs domain? Congratulations. Did you get a Croatian drivers license as well and pay for it all from a Russian bank?

  • That leavers will blame this on the EU as well.

    When will they face up to the fact that these problems are their fault, their failure to plan was a plan for this very failing brexit.

    • When will they face up to the fact that these problems are their fault, their failure to plan was a plan for this very failing brexit.

      They won't. They already know Brexit is going to be a disaster so they're busy blaming the EU, remainers, the civil service and certain civil servants in particular for it. There is literally nothing that will convince Brexiters that it's a bad idea. Everything that goes wrong will be due to "not doing Brexit properly" which means it's the fault of something other than Brexit

  • So the affected Brits will adapt and move on. This is a minor inconvenience compared to all of the other changes associated with Brexit.

  • I don't register huge numbers of domains, but I've never been asked to prove where I live. How would anyone know?

  • by caviare ( 830421 ) on Tuesday July 23, 2019 @02:46AM (#58970784)

    Brexit always was a big lie which the British parliament has seen through, even if the people didn't at the referendum. It won't happen. It doesn't matter who the PM is, the situation hasn't changed.

    The British parliament won't approve the May deal, they won't approve no deal, all they will do is kick the can down the road till the next general election.

    Whoever gets in after the election will either revoke article 50 or hold another referendum. If there is another referendum the people, who are sick to death of the whole business, will vote remain.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      I hope you are right, but there is a very real danger of the UK crashing out of the EU without any deal, simply because politicians fail to prevent it. The clock is ticking and it will require the UK to ask for an extension, which means forcing Boris to do it somehow.

Think lucky. If you fall in a pond, check your pockets for fish. -- Darrell Royal

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