UK domain registrations extended to a decade
By Oliver Lewis
Posted on 14 Nov 2011 at 18:04
UK businesses will be able to hang onto their .uk domains for ten years, Nominet has said.
Internet registry Nominet will extend the amount of time domain holders can hold onto their URLs from two years to ten staring from May 2012.
The development may help curb “cybersquatting”, where a failure to renew a domain results leaves it at risk of being acquired by a third party and ransomed back to the original owner.
"The change will give businesses and individuals the opportunity to lock in their domains for up to ten years, giving them security of tenure and a longer period between renewals,” said Nominet. Businesses are free to choose registrations periods up to ten years and give them “the opportunity to offer more flexible service”, it said.
"For millions of businesses, their domain name is mission critical, from their website to the email addresses it supports,” said Nominet CEO Lesley Cowley. “By offering longer registration periods, these businesses will have peace of mind that their domain name is secured for a number of years, and they won't have to worry about renewing so frequently."
Lady GaGa lost a legal battle over LadyGaga.org owned by a fan in September of this year, and in October Google lost a similar case against the owner of Goggle.com, a website frequented by those who misspell the popular search engine.
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No it won't?!
But in both cases in the last paragraph, these weren't domains that had been previously owned and not renewed by the complainants. The squatters will now be able to register them for longer!
By halsteadk on 15 Nov 2011 ![]()
Missing the point
I agree with halsteadk, if you cant remember to renew your domain after 2 years how will 10 years make a difference? if i cant rememeber to do something after a small period of time then over a large period im still not going to remember. Its also superfluous as most domain owners receive email notification from their suppliers ahead of expiry.
And again as halsteadk states, the examples you give are not squatters. Please reference related articles / cases and don't add confusion.
Put simply, what this change does allow for is Nominet to get more money upfront. that's it!
By smokinscots on 15 Nov 2011 ![]()
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