**********************************************************
Sponsored by the Singapore Internet Research Centre
http://www.ntu.edu.sg
/sci/sirc/
Sponsored by EuroDNS and AsiaDNS - for your domain name
registration
http://www.eurodns.com/
**********************************************************
Don't forget to check out http://auda.org.au/do
main-news/ for today's
edition of the complete domain news, including an RSS feed
- already
online!
Headlines from the December 13 edition of the news includes:
Internet Co-founder, Vint Cerf, Calls For New Environment to
protect
society from abuses | How next billion will shape net by
Michael Geist |
CEOs and Directors Need to Tackle Cyber Security Threats |
CEOs urged
to make infosecurity a priority | Are domain name
registrars responsible
for intellectual property infringement? | 'AKILL'
investigation
continues
And see my website - http://technewsreview.c
om.au/ - for daily updates
in between postings.
***************************************************
The domain name news is supported by auDA
***************************************************
Web founder Sir Tim Berners-Lee warns of short-termism
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/51c753fe-a43f-11dc-
a28d-0000779fd2ac.html
The Team That Put the Net in Orbit
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/09/business/09stream.html
NZ Internet Domain Name Disputes - Roundtable Discussion by
Philip Greene
http://www.cyberlaw.
org.nz/?p=30
What's up with 'whois'?
http://iht.com/articles/2007/11/14/business/PTEND15.php
a>
Land Grab? ccTLDs and multilingual names by Milton Mueller
http://blog.internetgovernance.org/blog/
_archives/2007/12/5/3392238.html
SWITCH is reducing the price for SWITCHbasic domain names
from CHF 22 to CHF 17 on 1 February 2008 [news release]
http://switch
.ch/about/news.html?id=155
Internationalised Domain Names (IDN) in .nz - Consultation
http://dnc.or
g.nz/story/30294-29-1.html
Brits lag behind European rivals in online brand protection
http://www.vnunet.com/vnunet/news/22054
10/brits-lag-european-online-brand
nz: Bot-boy caught in his own net
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.
cfm?c_id=5&objectid=10481058
NZ banks told to 'do their bit' to fight phishing attacks
http://computerworld.co.nz/news.nsf/scr
t/6236AF0C78E98F34CC2573A9007438C5
DNSSEC: Once More, With Feeling! by Geoff Huston
http://www.circleid.com/posts/dnssec_once_more_with_
feeling/
DNS attack could signal Phishing 2.0 [IDG]
http://www.computer
world.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&art
icleId=9052198
au: ANZ takes aim at cyber squatters over use of websites
http://bus
iness.theage.com.au/anz-takes-aim-at-cyber-squatters-over-us
e-of-websites/20071207-1fqw.html
Microsoft Vista's IPv6 Raises New Security Concerns
http
://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/140387/microsoft_v
istas_ipv6_raises_new_security_concerns.html
Seussical-Sounding Web Site Names
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/06/te
chnology/personaltech/06pogue-email.html
http://pogue.blogs.nytimes.com/20
07/12/06/the-dr-seuss-jumble-naming-web-sites/
dotMobi auction points to directions in online mobile
entertainment
http://technewsreview.com.au/article.php?article=3424
Mobile to account for 30% of music retail value by 2011,
leading to increased demand for .mobi domains
http://technewsreview.com.au/article.php?article=3427
**********************
GOVERNANCE
**********************
Web founder Sir Tim Berners-Lee warns of short-termism
Internet companies are taking a dangerously short-term view
and
ignoring big potential risks and opportunities as the
online medium becomes a
more central part of everyday life, according to the man
who invented
the worldwide web. Sir Tim Berners-Lee, who now oversees
the development
of new technology standards for the web as head of the
World Wide Web
Consortium, also criticised the lack of support for
long-term research
into these issues, which he said marks a break from the
traditional
approach technology companies have taken.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/51c753fe-a43f-11dc-
a28d-0000779fd2ac.html
The Team That Put the Net in Orbit
As a young NASA engineer during the 1980s, Milo Medin liked
to irritate
his managers by building scientific computer networks using
freely
available Internet software that outperformed more costly
commercial
systems. He was a member of a rebel generation of engineers
and scientists
that created what would become the commercial Internet
during a
tumultuous decade. And this group did so by ignoring
conventions and adopting a
cooperative spirit that turned into the hallmark of the
open source
software movement.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/09/business/09stream.html
NZ Internet Domain Name Disputes - Roundtable Discussion by
Philip
Greene
On Thursday 6 December 2007, Victoria University’s School
of Law
hosted a seminar titled, “Internet Domain Name Disputes:
A Roundtable
Discussion.” The 90-minute event, hosted in partnership
with the Office
of the Domain Name Commissioner and InternetNZ, was chaired
by Philip
Greene, InternetNZ’s Senior Research Fellow in Cyberlaw.
Greene was
joined by Debbie Monahan, the .NZ Domain Name Commissioner,
and Sir Ian
Barker, a world renowned domain name dispute expert, and a
.NZ and WIPO
UDRP domain name arbitration panelist.
http://www.cyberlaw.
org.nz/?p=30
DNSSEC-Deployment Group Now Discussing Distributed Root
Signing by
Brenden Kuerbis
DNSSEC and the issue of signing the root have been hot
topics in
Internet governance over the past year. Most recently, the
IGP co-sponsored
workshop at IGF-Rio saw several interested parties (see the
workshop
writeup) vigorously debating if the root should be signed.
Perhaps
anticipating that discussion, ICANN released a ccNSO survey
of 61 ccTLD
operators on DNSSEC just before IGF-Rio. It highlighted
that the majority of
interviewed operators preferred ICANN/IANA sign the root,
but numerous
other arrangements were identified as well. In Rio, the CEO
of the
largest ccTLD argued that deploying DNSSEC at the root
entails making a
decision about whether to dedicate trust to one or multiple
entities. She
and a representative of CGI.br openly expressed concern
about a single
entity controlling such a critical piece of the DNS.
http://blog.internetgovernance.org/blog/
_archives/2007/12/5/3393603.html
Overlapping Sets: From Rio to Delhi by John Mathiason
The second Internet Governance Forum in Rio de Janeiro
continued the
slow but steady movement to clarify the critical Internet
governance
issues. The Forum discussed, for the first time, the
initial issue that
prompted the international focus on Internet governance,
critical Internet
resources. It also explored the other clusters that had
been
identified: openness, diversity, access and security and
further refined these.
But the main result, not as well noticed, is a growing
recognition that
the key issues have less to do with the clusters than with
where they
overlap and conflict.
http://blog.internetgovernance.org/blog/
_archives/2007/12/5/3393601.html
IGF Workshop Summary: DNSSEC: Securing a Critical Internet
Resource by
Brenden Kuerbis
This informative workshop, co-sponsored by the Internet
Governance
Project, CGI.br, and EuroISPA, drew approximately 80-90
attendees from
government, civil society, the private sector and technical
communities.
While the multi-stakeholder panel brought a diversity of
opinions
regarding DNS Security Extensions (DNSSEC), they agreed
that improving the
security of the Internet’s infrastructure is an important
activity which
should be pursued.
http://blog.internetgovernance.org/blog/
_archives/2007/12/5/3393475.html
An IG Research Home: A Long Term Role for IGF? by Brenden
Kuerbis
It is quickly becoming apparent that an important function
of the UN's
Internet Governance Forum could be to serve as a long term
clearinghouse for knowledge acquisition and assessment
concerning Internet
governance. Despite its structural imperfections, the IGF
is becoming a magnet
for the academic community to discuss Internet governance
ideas. As
such, it may be finding its role in the global Internet
governance regime.
http://blog.internetgovernance.org/blog/
_archives/2007/12/5/3393138.html
Land Grab? ccTLDs and multilingual names by Milton Mueller
The introduction of internationalized domain names (IDNs)
offers the
world one of the best opportunities it will ever have to
introduce more
diversity and competition into the domain name registry
market.
Unfortunately, the politics within ICANN are threatening
that opportunity.
There is a move afoot to give country code TLD registries a
free gift of an
IDN top level domain. Did I say "a" free gift?
That implies only one.
But as I will explain later, it may turn out to be two, or
three, or
maybe six or even twenty free gifts by the time ICANN's
Governmental
Advisory Committee and CCNSO gets done with it.
http://blog.internetgovernance.org/blog/
_archives/2007/12/5/3392238.html
**********************
DOMAIN NAMES
**********************
**********************
- ICANN
**********************
If you have the technical ability to manage a top-level
domain, then
Icann will give you the right to do it by Guy Kewney
Imagine that you’re a programmer. You speak Korean, not
English, and
all your life you’ve never used a Roman alphabet; instead
you’ve
used characters, ideograms. Suddenly, you have to get your
head around
words such as ‘centre’ and ‘double precision’
written in the
Roman script.
http://www.pcw.co.
uk/personal-computer-world/comment/2205375/dot-squiggle-brea
kthrough-3569719
http://www.what
pc.co.uk/personal-computer-world/comment/2205375/dot-squiggl
e-breakthrough-3569719
ICANN CEO Congratulates Community Member on Honor [news
release]
Dr Paul Twomey, ICANN's President and CEO, congratulated
former board
member and current At-Large Advisory Committee member Vanda
Scartezini
on being named Brazil's most influential woman in
information and
communications technology.
http://icann.org/announcements/announcement-10dec07.htm
a>
Paul Twomey speech at Vint Cerf Gala event, October 2007
Speech by ICANN CEO Paul Twomey at Gala event to Vint Cerf
on Tuesday
30 October 2007 at Sony Studios, 10202 West Washington
Boulevard, Culver
City, Los Angeles.
http://blog.icann.org/?p
=254
ICANN's Nom Com needs help!
The group in charge of recruiting the best candidates for
ICANN's top
jobs is seeking the help of an outside organisation to cope
with its
increasing workload.
http://www.domainesinfo.fr/english/144/ican
n-s-nom-com-needs-help.php
Application Round Opens for Paris ICANN Meeting Fellowships
ICANN is putting out the call for fellowship program
applications for
its 32nd International Public Meeting to be held in Paris
from 22-27
June 2008. "The fellowship program plays a key role in
making sure that
global voices are heard at the ICANN meeting and in our
various public
forums," said Theresa Swinehart, ICANN's Vice
President, Global and
Strategic Partnerships.
http://icann.org/announcements/announcement-07dec07.htm
a>
Making the Internet truly local
IDNs are the Internet's real star at the moment. But why do
they
matter? And why is ICANN putting so much effort into them?
We asked Tina Dam,
Director of ICANN's IDN program, to enlighten us.
http://www.domainesinfo.fr/english/145
/making-the-internet-truly-local.php
Technical Community Networking in the Middle East by Baher
Esmat
Last month, I had the opportunity to participate in two
consecutive but
separate gatherings in the Middle East targeting the
technical
community of this region. The first was the second meeting
of the Middle East
Network Operators Group (MENOG), hosted by Q-tel and held
in Doha,
Qatar on 19-21 Nov. The other meeting was a technical
training for ccTLD
managers organized by ISOC and NSRC and hosted by Talal
Abu-Ghazaleh
College of Business in Amman, Jordan on 26-29 Nov. Although
the audience of
both events was different, the aim was to get the techies
of this
region together so they could exchange views, share
knowledge, and learn
from experts as well as from each other’s experiences.
Ultimately, the
aim is to see networks of expertise in the Middle East
actively engaged
in discussions and participating in work taking place at
various
international fora.
http://blog.icann.org/?p
=255
ICANN Blog en francais by Michele Neylon
In a multi-lingual and multicultural internet society it's
nice to see
that the ICANN blog is publishing content in languages
other than
English.
http://www.isquattedyour.eu/2007/12/06/icann-blog-
en-francais/
**********************
- (cc)TLD NEWS
**********************
Domain names show sustained growth
With a 31% increase year over year, the domain name market
remains
buoyant. There are now 146 million names registered
worldwide. .COM and
.NET registry Verisign has just published its latest
"Domain Name Industry
Brief", showing unabated growth for domain names in
the third quarter
of 2007. The new total of 146 million registered names is a
6% increase
over 2007's second quarter and a 31% increase over the
third quarter
of last year.
http://www.domainesinfo.fr/english/
146/domain-names-show-sustained-growth.php
SWITCH is reducing the price for SWITCHbasic domain names
from CHF 22
to CHF 17 on 1 February 2008 [news release]
It is the continuing stable growth in the number of domain
names that
has made a further price reduction possible. SWITCH reduced
the price
from CHF 27 to CHF 22 in September 2007 already. There were
1,046,387
domain names ending in .ch (Switzerland) and 50,379 domain
names ending in
.li (Principality of Liechtenstein) registered with SWITCH
as per 6
december 2007.
http://switch
.ch/about/news.html?id=155
Switch to lower annual fee for .ch, .li domains by CHF 5
[sub req'd]
http://www.telecompaper.com/news/article.aspx?id=195732
a>
.NL sunrise for numerical domains commences
The sunrise period for numerical only domain names began for
.NL SIDN,
the .NL registry, announced. In the next five days 56
numerical only
domain names were registered. The sunrise period finishes
on 14 December,
when the applicants of the numerical domain names will be
assessed to
ensure they meet the requirements by Deloitte. It is
anticipated a
landrush for numerical domain names will commence in late
January or early
February.
http://www.domainpulse.com/2007
/12/09/nl-sunrise-for-numerical-domains-commences/
Internationalised Domain Names (IDN) in .nz - Consultation
Currently, domain names in the .nz space only allow the 26
basic
English (Latin) alphabet characters a-z, digits and the '-'
hyphen. The Maori
alphabet has an additional five characters, the macronised
vowels a,
e, i, o, and u, which are currently not allowed in .nz
domain names.
http://dnc.or
g.nz/story/30294-29-1.html
Brits lag behind European rivals in online brand protection
UK businesses are at major risk of brand damage online
because of poor
domain name registration practices, according to a new
report from
domain name management specialist NetNames reveals.
http://www.vnunet.com/vnunet/news/22054
10/brits-lag-european-online-brand
http://www.infomaticsonline
.co.uk/vnunet/news/2205410/brits-lag-european-online-brand
a>
http://www.itweek.co.uk/vnunet/news/2
205410/brits-lag-european-online-brand
http://www.netimpe
rative.com/news/2007/december/3/uk-brands-neglecting-brand-p
rotection-online
British brands lag behind European rivals in online brand
protection
stakes
British businesses are at major risk of brand damage online
because of
poor domain name registration practices, the Cyberdaq
report from
domain name management specialist NetNames reveals. Leading
UK brands are 24
per cent less protected online than their German rivals.
http://www.domaininformer.com/news/press/071207NetNa
mes.html
**********************
- DNS SECURITY
**********************
nz: Bot-boy caught in his own net
For a young man who has been described by a seasoned cyber
policeman as
bordering on genius, Owen Walker's immediate prospects are
bleak.
Extradition to the United States is a distinct possibility
for the software
whiz who was bullied at Mercury Bay Area Primary,
home-schooled from
age 13, and five years later finds himself the centre of
attention of
FBI and Dutch investigators.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/story.
cfm?c_id=5&objectid=10481058
NZ banks told to 'do their bit' to fight phishing attacks
New Zealand banks could protect customers from phishing
attacks by
making a simple change to their internet address protocols
at little or no
cost, says Thom Hooker, director of operations at SMX, an
Auckland
based anti-spam and anti-virus email service provider.
“They’re putting
a lot of onus on the users but they should be doing their
bit at their
end,” he says. The owner of an internet domain address
can specify
who is allowed to send email using that domain address.
Internet service
providers such as Xtra can then identify and reject as spam
emails
which purport to be from banks.
http://computerworld.co.nz/news.nsf/scr
t/6236AF0C78E98F34CC2573A9007438C5
DNSSEC: Once More, With Feeling! by Geoff Huston
After looking at the state of DNSSEC in some detail a little
over a
year ago in 2006, I've been intending to come back to
DNSSEC to see if
anything has changed, for better or worse, in the
intervening period... To
recap, DNSSEC is an approach to adding some
"security" into the DNS.
The underlying motivation here is that the DNS represents a
rather
obvious gaping hole in the overall security picture of the
Internet,
although it is by no means the only rather significant
vulnerability in the
entire system. One of the more effective methods of a
convert attack in
this space is to attack at the level of the DNS by
inserting fake
responses in place of the actual DNS response.
http://www.circleid.com/posts/dnssec_once_more_with_
feeling/
DNS attack could signal Phishing 2.0 [IDG]
Researchers at Google Inc. and the Georgia Institute of
Technology are
studying a virtually undetectable form of attack that
quietly controls
where victims go on the Internet. The study, set to be
published in
February, takes a close look at "open recursive"
DNS servers, which are
used to tell computers how to find each other on the
Internet by
translating domain names like google.com into numerical
Internet Protocol
addresses. Criminals are using these servers in combination
with new attack
techniques to develop a new generation of phishing attacks.
http://www.computer
world.com/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&art
icleId=9052198
http://www.pcworld.
com/article/id,140465-c,onlinesafety/article.html
http://www.infoworld.com/ar
ticle/07/12/11/DNS-attack-could-signal-Phishing-2.0_1.html
a>
http://www.washingtonpost.co
m/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/12/11/AR2007121100722.html
Top 10 Best & Worst Anti-Phishing Web Registrars
Web site domain name registrars are increasingly finding
themselves at
the forefront of the never-ending slog against online con
artists and
phishers. But there is little consensus on how far
registrars should go
to police their pool of names for fraudulent activity, and
the
performance of registrars in decommissioning domain names
connected to fraud
scams is all over the map. Such was one of the many
findings in a
"brandjacking" report released last month by
brand security firm MarkMonitor.
November's report, which detailed online fraud trends for
Q3 of 2007,
was the first to include a list of the top 10 best and
worst lists of
registrar performance in revoking domain names connected to
phishing
scams.
http://blog.washingtonpost
.com/securityfix/2007/12/top_10_best_worst_antiphishing.html
China Link Suspected in Lab Hacking
A cyber attack reported last week by one of the federal
government’s
nuclear weapons laboratories may have originated in China,
according to
a confidential memorandum distributed Wednesday to public
and private
security officials by the Department of Homeland Security.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/09/us/nationalsp
ecial3/09hack.html
http://w
ww.news.com/2100-7349_3-6222069.html
http://www.networkworld.com/ne
ws/2007/121107-dns-attack-could-signal-phishing.html
**********************
- DOMAIN DISPUTES
**********************
au: ANZ takes aim at cyber squatters over use of websites
ANZ Bank has taken action to reclaim two websites from Asian
cyber
squatters who used the bank's name to attract visitors, but
made money by
selling links to the ANZ's competitors and pornography.
http://bus
iness.theage.com.au/anz-takes-aim-at-cyber-squatters-over-us
e-of-websites/20071207-1fqw.html
WIPO End Report on Case Administration under the Sunrise
Challenge
Policy for .mobi and the Premium Name Trademark Application
Rules for .mobi
Between September 2006 and March 2007, the WIPO Arbitration
and
Mediation Center processed 18 challenges under the Sunrise
Challenge Policy
for .mobi ("Sunrise Policy") and the Rules for
Sunrise Challenge Policy
("Sunrise Rules"), and 105 applications under the
Premium Name Trademark
Application Rules for .mobi ("Premium Name
Rules"). The present WIPO
Report provides a resume of the Center's administration of
challenges
under the Sunrise Policy and Rules and of applications
under the Premium
Name Rules. Both of these mechanisms were created by the
Center in
collaboration with the .mobi registry operator.
http://wi
po.int/amc/en/domains/reports/mobi
'Freedom Of Speech' Domain Names Acceptable - WIPO [AHN]
"Freedom of speech" domain names are acceptable,
says the World
Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), citing a
person's right to register
a company's name as a domain name to voice negative
opinions about
that company.
ht
tp://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7009382355
Bodog Foils Legal Ploy in Latest Ruling
Bodog was the winner in the latest ruling in a
patent-infringement
lawsuit that has developed more twists and turns than San
Francisco's famed
Lombard Street. On August 31, 1st Technology Inc. filed an
Ex-Parte
Application for Order Allowing Examination of Judgment
Debtor, which
would have compelled Bodog owner Calvin Ayre to appear at
their US
attorney's offices. Knowing anything about the current
legal climate for
principals of online sports betting sites might have lead
them to believe
that Calvin Ayre would be hard pressed to make a scheduled
appearance in
the US. If the court sided with 1st Technology and Ayre
failed to show,
they were ready with a motion for contempt.
http://www.pokernews.com/news/2007/12/bod
og-foils-latest-legal-ploy.htm
Vegas judge in favour of Bodog Entertainment S.A.
A federal judge In Las Vegas has ruled in favour of a motion
presented
by Bodog Entertainment S.A. in their ongoing case with 1st
Technology.
The motion initiated by the defence team stated that as the
company is
not resident in Nevada, it should not be subject to
examination under
Nevada law.
http://www.casinowir
e.com/?p=367
uk: New row over Mathew Street Festival - this time over a
domain
ONE of the men primarily blamed for the cancellation of the
Mathew
Street Festival has become embroiled in a row over the
ownership of the
domain names for the event’s website.
http://www.liverpoold
ailypost.co.uk/liverpool-news/regional-news/2007/12/07/new-r
ow-over-mathew-street-festival-this-time-over-a-domain-64375
-20215934/
**********************
- IPv4/IPv6
**********************
The Year IPv6 Made it to Major League By Yves Poppe
May 6th 2007: ARIN board of trustees passes a resolution
advising the
Internet community that migration to a new version of the
internet
protocol, IPv6, will be necessary to allow continued growth
of the internet.
http://www.circleid.com/posts/71269_year_ipv6_ma
de_major_league/
Microsoft Vista's IPv6 Raises New Security Concerns
Members of the Internet engineering community have raised
several new
security concerns about Teredo, a mechanism for sending
IPv6 traffic
over IPv4 networks that comes turned on by default in
Microsoft's Vista
software.
http
://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/140387/microsoft_v
istas_ipv6_raises_new_security_concerns.html
**********************
- MISCELLANEOUS
**********************
Seussical-Sounding Domain Names
Could it possibly be true? Has all wit and cleverness
already dried up
in the naming of Web sites, less than 15 years after the
Internet was
opened to the public? In the beginning, Web sites announced
their own
names. You pretty much know what you’re going to find at
Sears.com,
Staples.com, McDonalds.com and Microsoft.com.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/06/te
chnology/personaltech/06pogue-email.html
http://pogue.blogs.nytimes.com/20
07/12/06/the-dr-seuss-jumble-naming-web-sites/
Coming up short in domain name game
When the Hollywood studios say they don't know enough about
the
Internet to pay writers what they seek for the streaming
and downloading of
their shows, they might not be kidding. That was made
embarrassingly
clear Monday when a group of opportunistic writers unveiled
a website
lampooning the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television
Producers, which
represents the studios in labor negotiations. The alliance
neglected to
register two key domain names, an oversight seized upon by
the writers,
who are now in the sixth week of a strike.
h
ttp://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-strike11dec11,1,359
7536.story
First Passport, now fraud: ex-MS employee charged [IDG]
The former Microsoft employee associated with the company's
notorious
December 1999 Hotmail outage has been charged with fraud.
Carolyn
Gudmundson was indicted Thursday on charges that she raked
in more than $1
million during a four-year period by falsifying expense
reports she filed
for domain name registration charges.
http://www.infow
orld.com/article/07/12/07/First-Passport-now-fraud-ex-MS-emp
loyee-charged_1.html
http://www.pcworld.
com/article/id,140415-pg,1/article.html
http://www.washingtonpost.co
m/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/12/08/AR2007120800729.html
Ex-Microsoft manager faces 20 years for doctoring expense
reports
A former Microsoft manager who acquired, registered and
retired the
company's Internet domain names was arrested Thursday and
charged with
stealing more than $1 million from Microsoft Corp., travel
site
Expedia.com, and a California company, federal prosecutors
said Friday.
http://computerworld.co
m/action/article.do?command=viewArticleBasic&articleId=9
051878
VeriSign Releases Q2 Domain Brief
VeriSign announced on Wednesday it released its third
quarter 2007
Domain Name Industry Brief, revealing some 12 million new
domain names were
added over the past quarter. The total number of domain
name
registrations worldwide across all TLD names is 146
million, showing a 31
percent increase over the same quarter last year.
http://www.thewhir.com/marketwatc
h/120607_VeriSign_Releases_Q2_Domain_Brief.cfm
ENUM Summit Raises Questions, Concerns
ENUM is rolling right along with a conference here and a
discussion
panel there. The most recent was the ENUM Summit in Boston.
It was a well
attended and professionally structured conference with a
mix of
theorists, scientists, and some people with real revenue
generating service
awareness to bring to the party. This combination of
elements created an
interesting reaction.
htt
p://www.tmcnet.com/news/2007/12/06/3145987.htm
Internet Society Honours Nii Quaynor No Category
The Internet Society delivered it's most prestigious award
to Nii
Quaynor for his groundbreaking work in launching the
earliest Internet
technologies in Ghana, turning them into a powerful force
throughout Africa
and creating an entire movement of technologists who
continue to drive
Internet innovation and represent Africa's interests
globally.
http:/
/allafrica.com/stories/200712070425.html
http:
//hana.ru.ac.za/article.cfm?articleID=1802
Striking Writers Use Domain Name to Lampoon Studios
Writers acquire .com version of studios’ domain name.
http://domainnamewire.c
om/2007/12/11/striking-writers-use-domain-name-to-lampoon-st
udios/
**********************
- DOMAINING
**********************
New Domain Name Generator Lets You Find Available .com
Domains [news
release]
The domain name ideas generator at randomainer.com uses word
proximity
search and semantic analysis to find unregistered domain
names
instantly. MakeWords, a New York company, announced today
the launch of its
innovative domain name generator and search engine at
available domains
and see if any of the names suit their needs, or they can
continue their
search by clicking on the related words. Depending on the
requirements,
you may come up with a perfect match in a mere few minutes.
http://www.d
omainpulse.com/2007/12/11/new-domain-name-generator-lets-you
-find-available-com-domains/
h
ttp://www.domainnews.com/aftermarket/2007121202/new-domain-n
ame-generator-lets-you-find-available-com-domains/
ExpiredDomainSecret.com Teaches How to Grab Profitable
Expired Domains
[news release]
Everybody is after the proverbial 'golden niche' when it
comes to
online businesses. And for the past three years, the
expired domain names
market has been this niche. It is the most comprehensive
guide on
purchasing expired available domains ever compiled. It
covers the most basic
questions one can have about expired domains so it’s for
beginners,
and then the eBook shares insider strategies for maximum
profits so
it’s also for the more advanced expired domain buyer too
In 2005, sales of
5,851 domain names generated almost US$29 million. In 2006,
sales
surpassed the US$100 million mark. To date, there have
already been six
expired domains bought for over US$1 million each (one of
them was sold
for almost US$10 million!). And these statistics cover just
the public
domain name aftermarket. Private sales of expired domains
are said to be
bring in higher figures.
http://www.domainnews.com/aftermarket/2007121114/expi
reddomainsecretcom-teaches-how-to-grab-profitable-expired-do
mains/
http://www
.domainpulse.com/2007/12/11/539/
**********************
- AFTERMARKET
**********************
The US$345 million web address
Jake Winebaum surprised many when he paid $7.5 million for a
web
address in 1999 – but business.com has grown into a
successful company
Back in 1999, the internet entrepreneur Jake Winebaum and
his
associates paid $7.5 million for the domain name
business.com – a seemingly
crazy price for a simple web address. But the company
Winebaum built with
the name – a business-to-business directory and
advertising network
- was recently sold for an impressive $345 million, which
shows at the
very least that paying a lot of money for a web address can
sometimes
be worthwhile. In fact, web addresses have turned out to be
a windfall
for shrewd speculators, as we predicted in the very first
cover story of
the Industry Standard back in 1997. The world of
"domainers," as such
speculators are known, is secretive, and the terms of most
domain
transactions are never known publicly. But a public company
called Marchex
has revealed that it acquired more than 100,000 addresses
from a
secretive Chinese-Canadian domainer for an incredible $160
million.
http://technology.timesonlin
e.co.uk/tol/news/tech_and_web/the_web/article3018769.ece
dotMobi auction points to directions in online mobile
entertainment
dotMobi logoDotMobi are especially pleased with their recent
auction of
dotMobi names with a record-breaking auction that generated
approximately US$2.3 million in domain name sales.
http://technewsreview.com.au/article.php?article=3424
http:/
/www.domainpulse.com/2007/12/11/dotmobi-auction-points-to-di
rections-in-online-mobile-entertainment/
http://www.domainnews.c
om/aftermarket/2007121122/mobile-to-account-for-30-of-music-
retail-value-by-2011-leading-to-increased-demand-for-mobi-do
mains/
Mobile to account for 30% of music retail value by 2011,
leading to
increased demand for .mobi domains
Mobile music is on the rise, currently representing around
13% of
global recorded music retail value according to a new
industry report from
Understanding & Solutions. The report forecasts an
increase to almost
30% by 2011, amounting to US$11 billion and helping to
offset some of the
decline in packaged music revenues. This rapid growth is no
doubt
reflected in the recent sale of music.mobi for US$616,000.
http://technewsreview.com.au/article.php?article=3427
http://www.domainnews.c
om/aftermarket/2007121122/mobile-to-account-for-30-of-music-
retail-value-by-2011-leading-to-increased-demand-for-mobi-do
mains/
http://www.domainpulse.com/2007/12
/11/mobile-to-account-for-30-of-music-retail-value-by-2011-l
eading-to-increased-demand-for-mobi-domains/
Irish business chamber launches .mobi websites
Chambers Ireland logoMobile communications are striding
ahead, and the
demand for dotMobi domain names with subsequent websites
seems to be on
a strong upward curve. The recent dotMobi auction where
music.mobi and
games.mobi sold for US$616,000 and $401,500 respectively
are strong
indicators of this. Now Ireland’s largest business
network Chambers
Ireland has launched 23 websites using the .mobi Internet
address created
specifically for mobile phones.
http://www.domainpulse.com/2
007/12/11/irish-business-chamber-launches-mobi-websites/
http://www.domainnews
.com/general/2007121118/irish-business-chamber-launches-mobi
-websites/
http:
//www.techcentral.ie/article.aspx?id=11603
Music.mobi “Winner” Vows Lawsuit Against Sedo
Constantine Giorgio Roussos thought he was the winner of
Music.mobi in
yesterday’s .mobi auction at Sedo. He bid $66,000. The
auction ended
and he received an automated invoice from Sedo. He then
received a
“personal” e-mail from a Sedo employee (which also may
have been
automated).
http://domainnamewire.com/2007/1
2/07/musicmobi-winner-vows-lawsuit-against-sedo/
Third .mobi 'Premium Domain Name' Online Auction Shatters
Existing
Price Records [news release]
dotMobi closed its 2007 online auction series on December 5
with a
record-breaking auction that generated approximately $2.3
million for the
continued creation of mobile content tools like dotMobi's
popular
http://ready.mobi/ and http://site.mobi/ tools and its
forthcoming
device database.
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/news_press_rel
ease,239487.shtml
Grandpa.com Sells for US$55,000 to Lead WebmasterWorld
PubCon Auction
Moniker’s live auction at WebmasterWorld PubCon brought in
$245,500
in sales. 60 lots sold with a median price of $1,100 and an
average
price of $4,092.
http://dom
ainnamewire.com/2007/12/06/grandpacom-sells-for-55000-to-lea
d-webmasterworld-pubcon-auction/
Computer.com Closes at US$2.1 Million in 2nd Largest Deal
Reported This
Year and Another Sale Hits the Million Dollar Mark
Another big wave of completed sales from last month's
Moniker/T.R.A.F.F.I.C. East auction were closed this week,
including the auction's Big
Kahuna - Computer.com at $2.1 million. That's the second
largest sale
reported so far in 2007, trailing only Porn.com (a name
Moniker sold for
$9.5 million in May). You may recall that the high bid for
Computer.com
was $2.2 million but the foreign investment group that
placed that bid
was unable to get the cash transferred in a timely manner
so the
runner-up bidder took the opportunity to take the name for
$100,000 less.
http://dnjournal.com/archive/domainsales/20
07/domainsales12-05-07.htm
**********************
- NON-ENGLISH NEWS
**********************
Switch senkt Domain-Preise
Ab Februar 2008 kostet eine Domain bei Switch noch 17 statt
22 Franken
- und für 34 Franken gibt es ein Angebot mit zusätzlicher
Sicherheit.
http://www.infoweek.ch/news/NW_single.cfm?news_
ID=17199&sid=0
.ch-Domains werden nochmal billiger
Nach der letzten Preisrunde im September senkt Switch, die
offizielle
Schweizer Registrierungsstelle für .ch- und
.li-Domain-Namen, die
Preise für "SWITCHbasic" Domain-Namen ab dem 1.
Februar ein weiteres Mal,
nun auf 17 Franken. Anfangs September hatte Switch den
Preis von 27 auf
22 Franken gesenkt, im letzten November von 35 auf 27
Franken.
http://www.inside-it.ch/frontend/insideit
?_d=_article&news.id=12770
Schweizer Internetadressen nochmals billiger
Die Registrierungs- Monopolistin Switch senkt die Preise
für .ch- und
.li-Adressen von 22 auf 17 Franken pro Jahr.
h
ttp://www.toponline.ch/area-1.rub-41.art-75964.tce
Günstigere .ch-Domain-Namen ab 1. Februar 2008
Switch, die Registrierungsstelle für .ch und .li
Domain-Namen, senkt
die Preise für Switschbasic Domain-Namen per 1. Februar
2008 von 22
Franken auf 17 Franken.
http://www.persoenlich.com/news/show_news.cfm?newsid=7
2425
Switch senkt die Preise
Schweizer und Liechtensteinger Internetadressen werden per
1. Februar
2008 erneut billiger.
http://www.heute-online.ch/news/digital/swi
tch-senkt-die-preise-78237
Switch senkt die Preise für Domain-Namen
Switch, Registrierungsstelle für .ch und .li Domain-Namen,
senkt die
Preise für Domain-Namen per 1. September von 27 Franken
auf 22 Franken.
http://www.netzwoche.ch/N
ews/NewsDetail.aspx?id=31563&Digest=NIQJXs0OCYJFg6+4daZ2
pA
Schweizer Internetadressen werden erneut billiger
Schweizer und Liechtensteinger Internetadressen werden per
1. Februar
2008 erneut billiger. Die Registrierungs- Monopolistin
Switch senkt die
Preise für .ch- und .li-Adressen von 22 auf 17 Fr. pro
Jahr.
http://www.baz.ch/news/index.cfm?
keyID=6BF9B4A6-7C45-4B8B-AAC0F6F27F40F7A6&startpage=1&am
p;ObjectID=C389BA2A-1422-0CEF-707C54AEFD12A63B
SWITCH senkt den Preis für SWITCH [news release]
Das anhaltend stabile Wachstum des Domain-Namen-Bestandes
macht diese
erneute Preissenkung möglich. Bereits im September 2007
hatte SWITCH
den Preis von 27 Franken auf 22 Franken gesenkt. Am 6.
Dezember 2007
waren 1'046'387 Domain-Namen mit der Endung .ch (Schweiz)
registriert.
50'379 waren es bei .li (Fürstentum Liechtenstein).
http:/
/www.switch.ch/de/about/news.html?id=155
IETF sucht nach Übersetzungswegen zwischen IPv4 und IPv6
IPv4-Adressen werden in den kommenden Jahren knapp. Daher
drängte das
Internet Architecture Board (IAB) jüngst die Entwickler,
sich auch mit
der Frage möglicher Übersetzungsmechanismen zwischen
beiden Welten
zu widmen. Vorige Woche wurde bei der Internet Engineering
Task Force in
Vancouver überlegt, inwieweit
Network-Adress-Translation-Verfahren
für die Übersetzung zwischen beiden Protokollen (Network
Address
Translation – Protocol Translation, NAT-PT) nötig sind.
Von einer
früheren Variante von NAT-PT hat die IETF vor Kurzem
Abstand genommen. Sie
bereite zu viele Probleme.
http://
www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/100323
Weihnachten - der Wunschzettel eines Domainers
Noch 17 mal schlafen, dann ist Weihnachten. Haben Sie Ihre
Weihnachtsgeschenke schon zusammen – vielleicht für Papa
eine neue Krawatte,
für die Mama eine elektrische Zahnbürste und für Freund
oder Freundin
ein iPhone. Doch was schenkt man einem Domainer?
ht
tp://www.domain-recht.de/magazin/domain-news-2007/weihnachte
n-der-wunschzettel-eines-domainers-id667110.html
Update – Neues von .bb, .berlin und .md
Auf traumhaft schöne Inseln führt uns diesmal die Reise
durch die
Welt der ccTLDs. Aus deutschen Landen hört man dagegen
altbekanntes –
Streitigkeiten in der Politik. Gut, dass .asia da für
Transparenz
sorgt.
http://www.do
main-recht.de/magazin/domain-news-2007/update-neues-von-bb-b
erlin-und-md-id667112.html
dotBerlin kämpft für eigene Top-Level-Domain
In einigen Internet-Adressbereichen ist es inzwischen so
richtig eng
geworden. Mehr als elf Millionen .de-Domains und mehr als
73 Millionen
registrierte Domainnamen unter den Top-Level-Domains .com
und .net lassen
kaum noch Spielraum für sinnvolle Namen. Ein Beleg dafür
sind
beispielsweise die extrem hohen Preise, die bei
Domain-Auktionen und
Verkäufen erzielt werden.
http://www.d
slteam.de/news/artikel/27775
Deutsches IPv6-Gremium trommelt für künftigen
Internet-Standard
Das IPv6-Forum, dem mehr als 50 nationale Gremien
angehören, bekommt
Zuwachs aus Deutschland: Das German IPv6 Council, das von
Professor
Christoph Meinel, Direktor des Potsdamer
Hasso-Plattner-Institut (HPI)
geleitet wird, engagiert sich für die zügige Einführung
von IPv6 als
Internet-Standard.
http://
www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/100184
Deutscher IPv6-Council gegründet
Ein am Hasso-Plattner-Institut [HPI] in Potsdam gegründeter
Rat will
die Einführung der verbesserten Internet-Version IPv6 in
Deutschland
beschleunigen. Die bisher verwendete
Internet-Protokoll-Version 4 [IPv4]
sei schon 25 Jahre alt, betonte Prof. Christoph Meinel, der
Direktor
des HPI am Donnerstag in Potdam. "Ihre größten
Nachteile sind die immer
stärkere Verknappung von Internet-Adressen und
signifikante
Sicherheitsdefizite."
http://fu
turezone.orf.at/it/stories/241153/
Deutscher Rat will verbesserte Internet-Version vorantreiben
In Deutschland ist heute ein Rat gegründet worden, der der
Version 6
des Internet-Protokolls zum Durchbruch verhelfen will. Das
von Professor
Christoph Meinel, dem Direktor des Potsdamer
Hasso-Plattner-Instituts
geleitete Gremium nennt sich "German IPv6
Council". Der aus Vertretern
aus Politik, Wirtschaft und Wissenschaft gebildete deutsche
IPv6-Rat
werde einen Fahrplan entwickeln, wie das neue
Internetprotokoll in die
nationalen Strategien im Bereich der Informations- und
Kommunikations-Technologien eingebunden werden könnte,
sagte Meinel wenige Tage vor dem
nationalen IT-Gipfel der Bundesregierung.
http://www.zdnet.de/
news/tkomm/0,39023151,39159540,00.htm
Deutscher IPv6-Rat gegründet
In Deutschland ist ein IPv6-Rat gegründet worden, der der
neuen
Version des Internet Protokoll zum Durchbruch verhelfen
will. Das von Prof.
Christoph Meinel, dem Direktor des Potsdamer
Hasso-Plattner-Instituts,
geleitete Gremium nennt sich "German IPv6
Council", gab die Organisation
heute in Potsdam bekannt. Der deutsche Rat ist Mitglied im
weltweiten
IPv6-Forum. Diesem gehören mehr als 50 nationale Gremien
an.
http://de
.internet.com/index.php?id=2053362
http://www.umweltjournal.de/fp/archiv/AfA_technik/134
03.php
h
ttp://www.uni-protokolle.de/nachrichten/id/148460/
Will neue Internet-Generation in Deutschland vorantreiben
Ein am Hasso-Plattner-Institut (HPI) in Potsdam gegründetes
Gremium
möchte einer deutlich verbesserten Internet-Version in
Deutschland zum
Durchbruch verhelfen. Die bisher verwendete
Internet-Protokoll-Version 4
(IPv4) sei schon 25 Jahre alt, sagte Professor Christoph
Meinel in
Potsdam.
http://www.pcwelt.de/start/dsl_voip/sicherheit/news/1
39521/
http://www.computerwoche.de/produkte_technik/1850094/
http://www.satundka
bel.de/modules.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article
&sid=28676
Neue Sicherheitslecks in Vistas Webstack
Auch wenn das Netzwerkprotokoll IPv6, quasi das 'neue'
Internet, noch
mehr oder weniger in den Sternen steht, unterstützt
Microsoft diese
Technologie bereits.
http://www
.silicon.de/enid/antivirus/32052
www.domain-recht.de: Marlene Dietrich gewinnt Domain-Streit
[news
release]
Nach den US-Schauspielern Marlon Brando, Julia Roberts und
Tom Cruise
hat nun auch der deutsche Filmstar Marlene Dietrich ihren
Domain-Namen
marlenedietrich.com zurück gewonnen: Wie das
Online-Magazin
www.domain-recht.de berichtet, konnte sich die Marlene
Dietrich Collection GmbH
aus München mehr als 15 Jahre nach dem Tod der als
"Blauer Engel"
weltberühmt gewordenen Schauspielerin vor einem Genfer
UN-Schiedsgericht mit
Erfolg gegen einen mutmaßlichen südafrikanischen Domain-
Spekulanten
durchsetzen.
http://www.presseecho.de/computer%20&%20it/PB1410
48.htm
City-Domain .berlin erhält keine offizielle Berliner
Unterstützung
Die Berliner dotBerlin GmbH kann weiterhin nicht auf
offizielle
Unterstützung für ihren Plan bauen, eine Top Level Domain
.berlin
einzuführen. Einen Antrag der CDU, mit dem eine
entsprechende "Weiterentwicklung
des Adressraums Internet" gefördert werden sollte,
hat der Ausschuss
für Informationstechnik im Berliner Abgeordnetenhaus am
heutigen
Donnerstag mit den Stimmen der rot-roten
Regierungskoalition abgelehnt. Es
sei kompliziert genug gewesen, das Stadtportal berlin.de
für die
Berliner "zugänglich zu machen", begründete
Robert Schaddach von der
SPD-Fraktion die Zurückweisung der gesonderten
Städte-Domain. Nun habe man
dort "super viele Zugriffe", sodass man von dem
zentralen Portal für
die Vermarktung der Stadt sprechen könne. Bei einer
zusätzlichen Top
Level Domain mit zahlreichen Einzeladressen für die
Stadtverwaltung
werde die Angelegenheit nur komplizierter, meinte der
ehemalige Leiter
Geschäftsentwicklung der berlin.de new media
GmbH.
http://www.ecomm-online.de/aktuelles/aktuell+M5c96
7e9f64a.html
ISPA erwirkte Entschärfung des SPG
Die am Donnerstagabend vom Nationalrat angenommene Novelle
des
Sicherheitspolizeigesetzes wurde nach einer Intervention
des Verbands der
heimischen Internet-Provider [ISPA] geringfügig
entschärft.
http://fu
turezone.orf.at/it/stories/241362/
Die Meister der Nummern
Mit ENUM, dem "Telephone Number Mapping", werden
beispielsweise
Telefonnummern bestimmten Internet-Adressen zugeordnet.
Dann klingelt auf der
ganzen Welt das Mobiltelefon, wird eine einzigartige Nummer
gewählt.
Seit Jahren treibt das Vorhaben die Internationale
Telekommunikationsunion um, doch ENUM macht nur kleine
Fortschritte.
h
ttp://www.dradio.de/dlf/sendungen/computer/708379/
SWITCH réduit au 1er février 2008 le prix pour noms de
domaine
SWITCHbasic de 22 francs à 17 francs [news release]
La croissance toujours stable de l'effectif de noms de
domaine a permis
cette baisse de prix. En septembre 2007 déjà, SWITCH
avait réduit
le prix de 27 francs à 22 francs. Le 6 décembre 2007,
1'046'387 noms
de domaines .ch (Suisse) et 50'379 .li (Liechtenstein)
étaient
enregistrés chez SWITCH.
http:/
/www.switch.ch/fr/about/news.html?id=155
Le «cybersquatting» légitimé pour défendre la liberté
de
critiquer?
L'Organisation mondiale de la propriété intellectuelle
(OMPI) tolère
le «cybersquatting» lorsque cette pratique est utilisée
à des fins
de liberté d'expression, notamment pour protester contre
des services
ou des produits proposés par des entreprises. Selon Erik
Wilbers,
directeur du centre d'arbitrage et de médiation à l'OMPI,
le jury de
l'organisation est divisé mais penche de plus en plus pour
permettre à
ces sites d'exister. Et de citer le cas de l'affaire
chelwest.com, un
site créé par un particulier, Frank Redmond, pour
dénoncer l'hôpital
public Chelsea and Westminster de Londres, où il estime
que sa fille
a été très mal soignée.
http://www.
zdnet.fr/actualites/internet/0,39020774,39376382,00.htm
http://fr.news.yaho
o.com/zdnet/20071210/ttc-le-cybersquatting-legitime-pour-def
e-6a3d054.html
Marché du nommage : croissance continue
Le secteur des noms de domaine continue d'afficher une
croissance à
deux chiffres. On compte aujourd'hui 146 millions de noms
enregistrés,
soit 31% de plus par rapport à l'an dernier.
http://www.domainesinfo.fr/ac
tualite/1378/marche-du-nommage-croissance-continue.php
L'ICANN cite Domaines.Info !
Un article de la version anglaise de Domaines.Info a été
repris dans
la dernière newsletter hebdomadaire de l'ICANN.
http://www.domainesinfo.fr/actualite/138
1/l-icann-cite-domaines-info.php
Gouvernance internationale de l’Internet : un chemin ardu
Le 15 novembre s'est achevé le Forum de Rio sur la
gouvernance de
l'Internet. Mais la gestion internationale du Web reste
encore à faire.
http://www
.journaldunet.com/expert/19857/gouvernance-internationale-de
-l-internet-un-chemin-ardu.shtml
Le .ASIA ouvert à tous dès le 20 février 2008
L’extension asiatique ouvrira à tous selon un calendrier
en deux
étapes : une landrush à partir du 20 février 2008, puis
l’ouverture
totale, prévue le 26 mars 2008.
http://www.domain
esinfo.fr/extension/1377/asie-le-asia-ouvert-a-tous-des-le-2
0-fevrier-2008.php
Bernard Benhamou (Ministère de la Recherche) : "Nous
voulons que la
racine française devienne européenne"
La France vient d'obtenir une partie du contrôle de la
toile au forum
des Nations Unies sur la gouvernance de l'Internet. Le
délégué aux
usages de l'Internet auprès du ministre de la Recherche
revient sur cet
évènement.
http://www
.journaldunet.com/solutions/systemes-reseaux/interview/07/12
07-benhamou-internet-objet.shtml
Impulsan el lanzamiento del .lat
Antonio Harris, director ejecutivo de la Cámara de Bases de
Datos y
Servicios en Línea, aseguró que el desarrollo de este
dominio regional
creará una identidad latina en Internet
http://www.latinoamericann.org/modu
les.php?op=modload&name=News&file=article&sid=15
73&mode=thread&order=0&thold=0
Evite ser estafado a través de Internet
Diariamente nos enteramos sobre los numerosos fraudes a
través del
Internet. Las fuentes que usamos para aprender a no ser
estafados en la
Internet muchas veces pueden ser abrumadoras o poca
concreta dando como
resultado información que no es útil para evitar ser
estafado por este
medio. Los fraudes son más fáciles porque los negocios se
hacen sin
tener que dar la cara, haciéndolo más riesgoso y que los
estafadores
desaparezcan más fácilmente.
http://www.telemundo47.com/noticias/14784507/detail.html
Video explicativo sobre IDNs.
ICANN ha elaborado un video en el que se explican las
cuestiones
básicas relativas a los Nombres de Dominio
Internacionalizados (IDN).
http://blogdedominios.blogspot.com/2
007/12/video-explicativo-sobre-idns.html
Stories in Russian mentioning .SU
http://www.bb.lv/index.php?p=1&i=3891&s=
106&a=143297
http://lenta.ru/n
ews/2007/12/06/su/
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
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/>.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
(c) David Goldstein 2007
---------
David Goldstein
address: 4/3 Abbott Street
COOGEE NSW 2034
AUSTRALIA
email: Goldstein_David yahoo.com.au
phone: +61 418 228 605 (mobile); +61 2 9665 5773 (home)
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