trust is not security
security is not trust
Nominet bung them together as close as it can possibly squeeze them in the same sentence, as often as possible, but they are different things and they are separate.
It is possible that people will "trust" .uk more if they think (because Nominet over-sold the idea) that a verified address means you know more about the entity owning the domain name.
Address verification doesn't provide security.
Not because I said so, but because it doesn't. (i.e. that's a "fact")
Incidentally, Nominet are guilty of another little trick as well: presenting opinions and facts as of equal (and therefore equally low) value. You can see that in the summary of V1 consultation document, where they say things like "some respondents felt that blah blah blah" about stuff that's not opinion but "fact".
It's like Nominet saying "Some people think the Earth is round". Magically, when you couch a statement like that, it somehow forces the burden of proof onto the people who are having the "opinion". Gosh, so now I have to prove the Earth is round...
Whereas in reality there should be no need to defend facts because, well, they're facts!
Stephen, I understand your concern, but please always be mindful that there are two separate things going on here:
A) There are Nominet's statements (wishful thinking, wouldn't it be nice, fictional, unrelated, tangential etc.)
B) There is reality (fact based)
Even if Nominet say something, that doesn't necessarily affect/have anything to do with reality.
They can talk about security and .uk in the same breath until they lose their voices, but the FACT is there's nothing left in V2 as far as security goes. Read the proposal cover to cover and you won't find anything it that (in reality) will make one iota of difference on the security front.
That's not my opinion. It's fact.
See for example Simon McCalla's statement in the press release introducing the V2 consultation:
In response to the strength of feeling from our first consultation, we are tackling security differently. Moving forward, our approach has changed in two ways. Firstly, we have de-coupled security features from the second level domain proposals and will tackle this as part of a broader security roadmap that benefits the whole namespace. Secondly we will be working with registrars to develop and introduce new security features rather than mandating change.
It's so subtle, isn't it? "We have de-coupled security features". Yes, that's true. But it's not the whole truth. Because Nominet have actually decoupled ALL security features from the proposal.