Valid/invalid Label
Alireza Saleh
saleh at nic.ir
Sat Feb 28 10:22:39 CET 2009
Yes, because I think whatever happens beyond the registered level is the
applicant responsibility and if he wants to create names with confusion
it is up to him. This argument would be also true for the registries
that currently having some supplementary policies for bundling as these
policies are also effective only at the registered label with the registry.
Alireza
Patrik Fältström wrote:
> And this is why I do not understand why you propose alternative (1)
> that is _only_ limiting what a registry on highest levels in the tree
> does, and not solutions where we in protocol block what can be done at
> any level.
>
> Patrik
>
>
>
> 27 feb 2009 kl. 21.23 skrev Alireza Saleh <saleh at nic.ir>:
>
>> Theoretically yes, but it is not possible to blame the registry service
>> about whatever the owner of the domain wants to create under his domain.
>> The current DNS topography shows it is important to keep second level
>> labels safe. Consider a company owns x.com and having a legal service
>> under y.x.com, is possible for that company to create another host such
>> as z.x.com for phishing against y.x.com ?
>>
>> Currently many registries have some regulations under their TLD without
>> having any control of the sub-domains to protect against trademarks,
>> confusion and etc.
>>
>> Alireza
>>
>> Andrew Sullivan wrote:
>>> On Fri, Feb 27, 2009 at 01:38:34PM +0330, Alireza Saleh wrote:
>>>
>>>> I think that a possible solution would be considering virtual links
>>>> between one or some sections of Unicode and one or some TLDs.
>>>>
>>>
>>> I'm not convinced that "TLD" is the only important level, though.
>>> Surely it's entirely possible for someone to want (for instance)
>>> [U-label].blogspot.com. No?
>>>
>>> A
>>>
>>>
>>
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