- Joined
- Jan 16, 2011
- Posts
- 437
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The recent interrogation of Google, Amazon and Starbucks at the Parliamentary Select Committee prompted me to do whois inquiries on a few of the major intuitively-"non-UK" companies.
As a strong supporter of Nominet's data quality initiatives, I thought it would be interesting/instructive/amusing to see how some of the big players shape up.
I am rather surprised to note that several have an "unknown" registrant type. Previously I had assumed the major issues involved the individual v sole trader space, but it appears that there are rather bigger fish to, er, fry !
At first I thought this might simply be a weakness of the whois inquiry translation for specialised registrant types, but ibm.co.uk - a pre-August 1996 registration for a non-UK company - and others manage to successfully represent themselves accurately.
ibm.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
google.co.uk - Unknown
amazon.co.uk - Unknown
starbucks.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
audi.co.uk - UK Limited Company
renault.co.uk - UK Limited Company
peugeot.co.uk - UK Public Limited Company
bmw.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
samsung.co.uk - UK Limited Company
dell.co.uk - Unknown
sony.co.uk - UK Limited Company
apple.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
microsoft.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
mcdonalds.co.uk - Unknown
pizzahut.co.uk - UK Limited Company
burgerking.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
kfc.co.uk - UK Limited Company
lufthansa.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
klm.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
airfrance.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
So, unless I am missing something, it feels like Google, Amazon, Dell and McDonalds are glaring anomalies that, in conjunction with Nominet, need to sort out a pretty basic bit of admin. My list is clearly subjective, but I hope you will agree it is a reasonable selection of big names, many of whom are correctly represented.
As a strong supporter of Nominet's data quality initiatives, I thought it would be interesting/instructive/amusing to see how some of the big players shape up.
I am rather surprised to note that several have an "unknown" registrant type. Previously I had assumed the major issues involved the individual v sole trader space, but it appears that there are rather bigger fish to, er, fry !
At first I thought this might simply be a weakness of the whois inquiry translation for specialised registrant types, but ibm.co.uk - a pre-August 1996 registration for a non-UK company - and others manage to successfully represent themselves accurately.
ibm.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
google.co.uk - Unknown
amazon.co.uk - Unknown
starbucks.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
audi.co.uk - UK Limited Company
renault.co.uk - UK Limited Company
peugeot.co.uk - UK Public Limited Company
bmw.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
samsung.co.uk - UK Limited Company
dell.co.uk - Unknown
sony.co.uk - UK Limited Company
apple.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
microsoft.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
mcdonalds.co.uk - Unknown
pizzahut.co.uk - UK Limited Company
burgerking.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
kfc.co.uk - UK Limited Company
lufthansa.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
klm.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
airfrance.co.uk - Non-UK Corporation
So, unless I am missing something, it feels like Google, Amazon, Dell and McDonalds are glaring anomalies that, in conjunction with Nominet, need to sort out a pretty basic bit of admin. My list is clearly subjective, but I hope you will agree it is a reasonable selection of big names, many of whom are correctly represented.