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foz and Stephen, I totally agree.
I do agree that Nominet should contact all .uk domain owners and trademark holders as a matter of course as well as announce it in the national press.
The problem I have is the domainers on this forum who think that they should automatically get grandfather rights over trademark holders and businesses, and also the sheer self interests that are on display here, as I've said before if the people who are making the most noise didn't own any domains they wouldn't care less about the direct.uk proposal.
Do you actually think Nominet cares what domainers have to say anyway, as far as they are concerned domainers are right at the bottom of the ladder.
I can't believe you actually said that as you are one of the most biased people on this forum with your 7000 domains.
About the Author (and Declaration of Interests)
This document was written by Edwin Hayward.
I am a director and co-owner of 2 UK Ltd companies that stand to be directly impacted by Nominet's proposal, Memorable Domains Ltd and Maps Ltd.
My involvement in the domain name industry started in 1996 when I established the world's first dedicated domain name news and information website, iGoldrush.com. I sold this website to its current owner in 2000, but I have remained active in the industry ever since.
I have presented on panels at a number of domain conferences, most notably the MeetDomainers show held in Manchester in August 2010, and the TRAFFIC ccTLD conference held in Amsterdam in June 2009. I have also exhibited at Internet World in 2008 and 2009.
On occasion, I have featured in the media on domain name issues, going back to news reports by CNET.com in 1997 , and I am referenced in "The Domain Name Game", a book by David Kesmodel.
Memorable Domains Ltd is a domain investment company that maintains a portfolio of over 7,000 generic, descriptive .co.uk domains (names such as MapleSyrup.co.uk, SearchEngine.co.uk, Comedies.co.uk and ElectricBicycles.co.uk).
More information: http://www.memorabledomains.co.uk/
Maps Ltd is focused on developing local area guides (business / tourist directories for towns and cities across the UK). Developed sites include Maps.co.uk, Cambridge.co.uk, BuryStEdmunds.co.uk, Newmarket.co.uk, Stowmarket.co.uk and others. It maintains a portfolio of over 70 geo domains for future development, including Blackpool.co.uk, Lancaster.co.uk, Kendal.co.uk, Map.co.uk and Britain.co.uk.
More information: http://www.maps.ltd.uk/
Bottom line, it's frankly pathetic to keep trying to take cheap shots at me as a substitute for producing a reasoned argument in support of .uk.
I think the damage that has been done to the uk namespace is not going to be easily repaired and Nominet will be held responsible for the long term effects of their actions.
...I think the damage that has been done to the uk namespace is not going to be easily repaired and Nominet will be held responsible for the long term effects of their actions.
If you go to domainlore.co.uk and look on Sedo .uk (sure they mean .co.uk) tab, you will see the last "30 last finished" auctions section their was only 1 domain actually sold, out of the 30 .co.uk listed!
I know its December and a slow month traditionally but confidence in the UK namespace, I agree has been greatly damaged.
comparetelevisions.co.uk
passportprices.co.uk
landscapingdesigns.co.uk
antiquehinges.co.uk
teachinghistory.co.uk
dublinrestaurants.co.uk
mauritiusweather.co.uk
seaanimals.co.uk
cartridgebag.co.uk
healthcareemployment.co.uk
healthcarelaw.co.uk
parisrestaurants.co.uk
holidayincrete.co.uk
motorcyclerack.co.ukm
christmaswholesale.co.uk
maternitybenefits.co.uk
backgroundpictures.co.uk
jewelryonline.co.uk
freeav.co.uk
flightstobodrum.co.uk
weatherhistory.co.uk
internationalclock.co.uk
customersupport.co.uk - 500 GBP - sold
playmahjong.co.uk
isoftdoc.co.uk
legaladviceservices.co.uk
kommersant.co.uk
jobtree.co.uk
insurancepeople.co.uk
hotelsinprague.co.uk
These are the last 30 Sedo sales listed on there, if any of those were dropping tomorrow, I wouldn't be loading them, with the exception of the one that sold for £500, and I wouldn't reg any if they were even available to register now:
I look at the Sedo sales page on Domainlore every day
.... Out of those 120 only 2 have since been registered and both by other people whose details I recognise.
The .uk has given me the kick up the backside to say sod it and drop it.
Would you mind stating wether you think sales on Sedo (or elsewhere) of .co.uk domains have been effected adversley by the .uk proposal?
..Even if Nominet dropped opening up the second level the poor confidence in .co.uk will stick. ...
The security proposals are an add value proposition to command (gouge) a £20 per annum fee....
Whenever you modify the zone on your unsigned master, this change will be propagated to the DNSSEC Signing Service, and the zonefile will be re-signed and sent to your signed slave. Also, the zone needs to be re-signed periodically to keep the signatures valid. The DNSSEC Signing Service will do this automatically, and send the updated zonefile to your signed slave.
Of course you may want to duplicate the unsigned master / signed slave for reliability through redundancy; the DNSSEC Signing Service will try all your unsigned masters, and pick the one offering the latest SOA. This signed zonefile will propagate to all your signed slaves. Conversely, it is not necessary to separate the signed slave and your public nameserver - this could be a single server.
System transactions
1.Registrar sends a request to sign a zone by EPP or Web Domain Manager
2.Nominet's EPP server passes the request to the DNSSEC Signing Service
3.The Signing Service polls the registrars unsigned master for a zone transfer
4.The Signing service receives the zone
5.The signing service generates a DNSSEC Key and,i.The signed zone is transferred the the signed slave nameserver
ii.The DS record is published in the parent .uk zone, in response to an EPP <secure> command.
6.The registrar publishes the signed zone from the slave to their public nameserver
Domain Name System Security Extensions (DNSSEC) is a protocol that adds security to the Domain Name System (DNS) by verifying name server responses in what is called a “chain of trust”, thereby making the DNS more secure.
.eu implemented DNSSEC on 9 June 2010 and is one of the first TLDs to have a complete DNSSEC chain of trust. This is important because validation occurs all the way up to the Internet root zone and means that anyone visiting a DNSSEC-enabled .eu domain name can be confident of its legitimacy.
Since DNSSEC can only reach its full potential once it has been adopted for all domain names, we want to make it as easy as possible for our registrars to implement the protocol. That’s why we introduced a DNSSEC Signing Service (DSS) that allows our registrars to enjoy all of the advantages of DNSSEC with none of the hassle.
Nominet could introduce mail out address verifications on each account without any new extension offerings.
I don't think it has been damaged by anymore than 1% compared to what it will be if they attempt to push this through. The downside of this is few know about the .uk issue to complete the consultation, it is also the saving grace. If people find out at the moment they can fill in the consultation, so not too bad. If people find out after January the 7th, then it will do huge damage.
I feel like I am at weight watchers.... I shed 120 domains in the .uk plan. I'm down to 444 now, and dropping to about 30 prime names. They think they can do without the income from the so-called secondary market then they should give it a try. They think the secondary market's portfolio's are full of valuable names. I think they need a reality check. Most of names in any portfolio I have seen are garbage and it goes for most of us. We were all paying Nom for nothing more than the fear of someone registering what we dropped as we came to our senses. When I look at names I hold, that has been my fear since moving from domainer to web developer and online business owner. Out of those 120 only 2 have since been registered and both by other people whose details I recognise.
The .uk has given me the kick up the backside to say sod it and drop it.
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