Rich, <registrar_hat_current="on"> <epp_coauthor_hat="on"> <registry_hat_expired="on"> You have an opinion, but I'm unable to detect a basis for that opinion. Allocations of string-space do not give rise to control over any resource other than (conditionally) the string. Publication of association(s) between strings and addresses, as well as the formation of an association subject to a publication policy, involves zero or more parties other than a "registrant", and there are several orders of magnitude fewer entities other than "registrants" that participate in address association and association publication. </registrar_hat_current> </epp_coauthor_hat> </registry_hat_expired> <p3p_spec_coauthor_hat="on"> It wouldn't hurt you to read our spec, if only for the nomenclature. If you read some EU data directives, so much the better. </p3p_spec_coauthor_ha> <nanog_er_weenie_hat="on"> You may want to look at the whois policies of the RIRs and some of the ccTLD operators. </nanog_er_weenie_hat> <ietf_whoisfix_bof_cochair="on"> See also http://www.imc.org/ietf-whois/mail-archive/msg00218.html and rfc3912 </ietf_whoisfix_bof_cochair="on"> Eric