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Neither is advisable..
Some companies and their lawyers will sue anybody at the drop of a hat.

Both of your desribed methods leave a tail of evidence and are far from perfect.

The trasferee(receiver) must expend funds to initiate domain tranfer.(new registration.) A flaw in second method occurs when website changes DNS entries you fail to notice the change, presto lawsuit time.

Requiring a simple deletion protocal is all that's needed.

You can do a search on ICANN's website and it will turn up 1000's of proposed rules, but try to find the CURRENT rules and policies.. good luck..

Hint to ICANN.. FIRE your WEBMASTER!!!

If you can't provide this basic info to the customers, then you don't belong in this line of work.
Posted by: thetruth_z   Posted on: 12/08/05 You are currently: a Guest | Members login | Terms of Use

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It gives me warm *fuzzies*  jmills@... | 12/07/05
Whatever...  techboy_z | 12/08/05
ICANN based?  James Schroer | 12/08/05
ICANN but You Can't  Nigel Johnstone | 12/08/05
Please!  techboy_z | 12/08/05
Secret prisons/torture/murder of reports  Nigel Johnstone | 12/08/05
He said evidence...  doctormoriarty | 12/09/05
There is no proceedure to delete mispelled or domains registered in error.  thetruth_z | 12/08/05
You can always transfer...  jseder | 12/08/05
Neither is advisable..  thetruth_z | 12/08/05
Simple answer  James Schroer | 12/08/05
Privacy and anti-spam are compelling reasons to falsify information  yriart | 12/18/05

What do you think?

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