This makes sense to me as well. There should be some time period in
which the RSP has some recourse through OpenSRS to claim ownership of
domains (with the burden of proof being on the RSP) that have defaulted
on payment. This could also serve to keep domains in a "registered"
state if customers are difficult to contact at renewal time. At least
the RSP could reclaim some of the losses by selling off the stolen
domain names if there was a chargeback on the account.
-Ken
http://domains.pacific.net
On Fri, 03 Mar 2000 03:16:24 -0500
Ben Gerber <bgerber.lists@vkinetic.com> wrote:
> At 12:56 AM 3/3/00 -0500, David Iyoha wrote:
> ...
> >Therefore if a customer bought 5 domain for 2 years apiece and then
> >there was a charge back or bounced check. All the RSP would have to do
> >is show proof to the responsible OPENSRS department and then OPENSRS
> >would assign the control of the domains over to the RSP.
> ...
>
> idea:
> Perhaps the RSP could have a ~30 day window for a new registration (or
> instead, a new customer) in which they could claim ownership of the
> domain(s) in accordance with the above. Then after the initial billing
> situation is over, all billing involved with that domain (or if by
> customer, that customer) would be the burden of the RSP.
>
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