Court rules in favour of ICANN

By Jim Hu, Special to ZDNet
17 November 2003 10:30 AM
Tags: icann, hu, domain, court, registrars, name, jim, verisign
A federal judge has denied a preliminary injunction filed against the organisation that oversees Internet domain names and addresses.

In a ruling released Thursday, a federal court in Los Angeles dismissed charges filed by two domain name registrars that alleged the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) had engaged in anticompetitive practices. The charges were filed after ICANN said it would hand over the management of expired domain names ending in .com and .net, called the Wait-Listing Service, to online security company VeriSign. The plaintiffs claimed that ICANN breached its obligations because many other parties had objected to its proposal.

The court ruled, however, that the wait-list change would not harm competition or the public trust.

"Accordingly, it appears that the implementation of WLS has the potential to benefit registries, registrars who do not currently offer wait-listing services, and most importantly the public," the ruling read.

ICANN's decision to hand over the WLS to VeriSign launched a debate that expanded beyond the court room. In June, two members of the House of Representatives introduced a bill to block the move.

VeriSign, which has a government-granted monopoly as the main database administrator for .com and .net domain names and addresses, recently has been sparring with ICANN over the company's controversial "Site Finder" service, which snared traffic to nonexistent Internet sites and forwarded it to VeriSign's own servers. The service is now at least temporarily on hold.

Declan McCullagh contributed to this report.

Advertisement

Talkback 0 comments

Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Chris Duckett Get extensions going in Firefox, redux
    Previously on Null Pointer we looked at getting extensions working in Firefox betas, and that was great until the fine folks at Firefox changed their minds.
  • Array How reliable is IP telephony?
    Have you ever heard a weird kind of hissing, crackling or popping noise when calling someone on an IP telephony line? How rare is the phenomenon these days?
  • Array Forget the NBN, 100Mbps is already here
    Telstra and TransACT will shortly begin offering 100Mbps broadband to many customers. By moving early, the companies have not only raised the bar for Australia's broadband services, but thrown down a challenge to a government that now faces increased pressure to deliver the NBN as promised.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured