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[alac] [fwd] [council] Important WHOIS decision in Australia (from: Mueller@syr.edu)
- To: alac@xxxxxxxxx
- Subject: [alac] [fwd] [council] Important WHOIS decision in Australia (from: Mueller@syr.edu)
- From: Thomas Roessler <roessler@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2003 20:05:20 +0200
FYI
--
Thomas Roessler <roessler@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
At-Large Advisory Committee: http://alac.info/
----- Forwarded message from Milton Mueller <Mueller@xxxxxxx> -----
From: Milton Mueller <Mueller@xxxxxxx>
To: NCUC-DISCUSS@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Cc: council@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Date: Tue, 23 Sep 2003 11:03:30 -0400
Subject: [council] Important WHOIS decision in Australia
X-Spam-Level:
Tuesday, September 23, 2003
ASIC Fails To Get Full Access To Whois Data
Mandy Bryan
The Australian Securities and Investments Commission has failed in a bid to
gain unfettered access to the Whois database of Australian website owners, in a
policy review finalised yesterday. ASIC and other law enforcement agencies had
argued during public consultation that they should be granted bulk access to
the database. The consultation related to the annual review of policy
surrounding the collection, use and disclosure of Whois data.
Australia's domain name regulator, auDA, ruled in its updated policy
yesterday that law enforcement agencies must request full data on a
case-by-case basis during official investigations.
"We do not believe that it is appropriate to compromise the integrity of the
Whois database and privacy of registrants merely for the convenience of law
enforcement officials," auDA's chief, Chris Dispain, said.
----- End forwarded message -----
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