You make no point about registrants being emailed, which would be needed, because, as for points 2 and 3 above, I rarely visit any of my sites, so even if it had big letters in font size 30 saying whatever in a timer count down, I wouldn't see it because I don't visit my sites.
Sorry, it was late and I skipped a few steps to paint a broad picture. You're spot on, of course.
In fact, I believe that Nominet should step into the communication process earlier to provide a little more protection for registrants. For example, they could email domain owners whose domains are due to expire in 7 days. That way, even if the registrar is bad at communicating, they are guaranteed to have at least some warning! Perhaps they could also snail-mail 14 days into the expiry period, as well as more emailed warnings.
That way, domain owners would get AT LEAST:
- 1 emailed warning before expiry
- 1 postal warning during expiry
- a number of emailed warnings during expiry
- the clear, lucid, explanatory warning page that was up for 90 full days during which time their site/email aren't working
On top of the above, of course, they would also get however many/few communications their particular registrar supplied - I've only described Nominet's part of the process. But with all of this in place, it should be impossible for a registrant to mount a credible "but I didn't know" defense when their name gets "taken away from them" (as they perceive things).
I honestly think we have some good heads at Nominet and lets face it they've got plenty of working-models and pitfuls to base their planned developments around. so really no excuses for getting it wrong
The problem isn't Nominet. I've been to some of their focus meetings, and it's clear the problem lies in the fact that different constituents have radically different and competing points of view - and Nominet's role lies in trying to steer an acceptable middle course that doesn't disturb anyone TOO much. In other words, there are much fewer "wrong" scenarios than you might at first imagine! They're only wrong for a particular group...
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Separate to all this, but also relevant, it would be interesting to see Nominet mandate that the ultimate owner of the domain name must EXPLICITLY be the registrant i.e. to outlaw (through changes in their T&C and code of practice) the scenario of web design firms etc. buying in their own names on behalf of their clients. Adds yet another layer of protection for registrants.