[vnunet.com...] - do you think that country names can be realistically banned from domain names? What about if the domain is the company name, and the company name includes the country name?
Some countries have lost the cases where they wanted to take over the .com variant of the country name. This new move to restrict the use of country or place names is bad for the industry. It would seem, on reading the article, that the idiots in WIPO are trying to retroactively change the unmanaged tlds of com/net/org into a quasi-managed registry where there are specific restrictions as to what can and can not be registered.
Regards...jmcc
From dealing with the .ie cctld, managed registries tend to have a negative impact on local internet industries. The .ie cctld is small and remains small because of a poorly managed registry that has resulted in a registrant having to prove entitlement, a high price of registration (highest in the EU) and a slow registration process. The common argument here is 'why go .ie for 70 Euros a year when you can get a .com for 15?'. Now the counterargument is that you know that the owner of a .ie is a legitimate business with entitlement to the name.
A managed registry is a nice idea on paper and appeals to lawyers and to anyone who has ever seen a good domain that they wanted squatted. However it would be necessary to run a tld on a managed basis from the start. Trying to impose management results in all sorts of legal problems. Nobody would give a damn if a cybersquatter or two got it in the neck but if a high profile portal or business was affected attitudes would change dramatically. At a guess, (based on domain geolocation research I am doing on .com/net/org), somewhere between 20 and 35% of CNO domains are speculative registrations. Somehow I think that the registrars would be against this kind of interference.
Regards...jmcc