LYCOS RETRIEVER
Whois: Internet Corporation
built 622 days ago
Governments, Public Interest Groups Support WHOIS Privacy ICANN has posted the written statements of several government and private entities supporting privacy in the WHOIS database. Various government officials contributed to the record supporting a narrower formulation of the database's purpose, including the Privacy Commissioner of Canada, the Chair of the European Union Working Party on Data Protection, and the President of the Belgian Data Protection Commission. Private organizations, including the Association for Computing Machinery and the Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic... supported this formulation, which would pave the way for implementing better WHOIS privacy in the future. EPIC's comments on the proceedings are available here. (Jul. 28)
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[H]ttp://rs.internic.net/cgi-bin/whois) The official address-givers' records on who owns a site, including the city and phone number of the person who signed up for a site's Web address. This is the famed InterNIC, where you go to get your site on the Internet. It's much harder to fake a web address than an e-mail address.
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WHOIS data is globally, publicly accessible. Anyone with Internet access, including stalkers, corrupt governments who dislike international exposure, spammers, intellectual property lawyers, law enforcement, consumers, individuals, etc., has access to WHOIS data. The important point to realize here is that WHOIS data lends itself to both good faith and bad faith uses, and that investigating fraud is only one of many uses of WHOIS data.
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