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Is $.20 enough to stop domain tasters? ICANN thinks so

January 30, 2008, 03:43 PM —  IDG News Service — 

A proposal by the overseer of the Internet's addressing system could make it
a lot easier for people to reserve the domain name they want for their Web site.

The Internet Corporation for
Assigned Names and Numbers
(ICANN) is considering keeping the annual fee
it charges registries for a registered domain name, even if the domain name
is forfeited during the five-day Add Grace Period. ICANN currently charges US$0.20
per domain per year.

The move is intended to stop "domain tasting," a practice where thousands
of domain names are purchased at a time and monitored to see which get the most
traffic during the grace period, said Jason Keenan, media advisor for ICANN.

The grace period is intended to let people get a refund if they make a spelling
mistake while registering a domain. But rogue registrars have been abusing the
grace period by setting up thousands of Web sites stuffed with advertising links
on newly registered domains.

The domain tasters then keep the ones that generate the most click-through
advertising revenue and forfeit the unprofitable domains for a refund before
the grace period expires. Some registrars have been known to repeatedly register
and unregister domain names as the five-day grace period expires, essentially
never paying for use of a domain.

Domain tasting is a problem for users since it means a domain they want to
purchase may be temporarily or permanently unavailable. It also means more low-quality
Web pages on the Internet that are designed only for generating advertising
revenue.

The imposition of a fee would make it a lot more expensive for domain tasters,
Keenan said.

"Right now you can go and register a million different names for five
days and the cost is zero," Keenan said. "If this [proposal] comes
through, the cost is $1 for five [domains]. It really changes the fiscal model
of tasting."

A study released earlier this month by ICANN shows how bad the problem has
become over the last two years. In January 2005, there were 1.7 million .com
and .net domains registered. Of those, 700,000, or 41 percent, were deleted
during the grace period, for a total net increase of 1 million domains.

During January 2007, 51 million domains were registered, but 48 million were
deleted, or about 94 percent. "There was a net increase of 3 million names
but most of the rest were just being 'tasted'," the
report said
.

The fee is also expected to put the brakes on another practice, known as "front
running." Some ISPs and registries sell records of what domain names people
have searched for, and those domains will end up being "tasted," said
Susan Wade, spokeswoman for Network
Solutions
, a registry.

Often the tasters will try to sell those domains at inflated prices, she said.
Network Solutions has tried to stop the behavior by
registering a domain name for four days
after someone conducts a search
for one on its Web site.

Critics have decried the approach, saying that it forces customers to pay Network
Solutions for a domain or face further competition when the domain goes back
on the market. Wade countered that Network Solutions doesn't charge any more
for the domain, and it prevents the domain from being immediately scooped up
by a taster.

However, Wade said Network Solutions will stop the practice if ICANN imposes
a fee.

"At that point, we believe that our customers would no longer need protection
from front running," Wade said in an e-mail.

The fee proposal is contained within ICANN's 2009 fiscal budget, which will
be discussed in Paris in June, Keenan said. It must be approved by ICANN's board
as part of the budget.

It must also be approved by registrars that comprise two-thirds of the revenue
ICANN receives from domain registrations, Keenan said. There are about 900 or
so registrars for the seven generic Top Level Domains (TLDs) that have the Add
Grace Period: com .net .org .info .name .pro and .biz, he said.

Registrars have been complaining to ICANN about domain tasting for some time
and appear ready to support the plan. Some registrars, such as GoDaddy.com,
have dissuaded tasters from using their registration services by reserving the
right to charge a fee even for domains that are returned within the five-day
period.

Network Solutions also deflects tasters by not issuing bulk refunds for registrations
before the five-day grace period expires, Wade said.

However, most tasters end up become registrars themselves, said Warren Adelman,
GoDaddy's
president and chief operating officer. "We hope that we are really beginning
to see the end of an era of what's been negative behavior," he said.

The only other option to stopping tasting would be to get rid of the grace
period, which would hurt users, said John Levine, an author and technology consultant.
The fee is the easiest route, he said.

"It will definitely stop domain tasting," Levine said. "It's
clear they [tasters] have to register several hundred domains to find one that
will pay off. It's pretty hard to find a hither-to-unknown domain to find $50
of revenue."

IDG News Service

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