Ross Wm. Rader wrote:
> > How about where the domain is owned by a company rather then an
> > individual? It's common for a company to use the company name as the
> > "real name", and/or a roll account.
>
>In this case, the Administrative Contact would be required to authorize
>the request. This is a big change over the current policy where
>basically anyone can hold themselves out to be a representative of the
>registrant. The new policy tightens this down significantly...example...
>
>microsoft.com
>
>Registrant: Microsoft Corp.
>Admin Contact: Joe Smith, System Admin
>Transfer authorized by: Bill Gates, on behalf of "Microsoft Corp."
>
>Technically, this is an illegitimate authorization. Even though Bill is
>authorized to act on Microsoft's behalf, the only real party authorized
>to transfer this name is the admin contact seeing as how the Registrant
>really can't authorized it themselves (being that its a company, not a
>person...)
>
I guess the question is, what happens when "Joe Smith" quits, and it
turns out the email he used isn't under the company's control?
What paperwork or documentation is required to prove that Mr Gates is
authorized to act on behalf of the company?
Articles of incorporation are fine and dandy, but very simple to forge
if you know the recipient isn't going to make any effort to validate or
verify them. The process of faxing or photocopying can cover up the
traces the paperwork was documented.
-- I'd rather be told "Have a nice day" by someone who doesn't mean it, than to "F--- OFF" by someone who does.
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.3 : Tue Oct 19 2004 - 23:37:58 EDT