Last Friday, ICANN issued a notice to Registerfly.com – an internet domain name registrar which holds two million domain names and has over 900,000 customers – indicating that its ICANN accreditation will cease on 31 March 2007.
The announcement follows a rift between business partners Kevin Medina and John Naruszewics in January. In the ensuing chaos, thousands of domain names have broken down; the service has been so poor that angry customers have set up their own forum www.registerflies.com.
When the complaints started to flood in, ICANN’s ombudsman advised customers to go direct to Registerfly. But many were left wondering where ICANN’s responsibility lay – after all, it had originally approved Registerfly as a registrar and allowed its logo to be used on Registerfly’s website.
ICANN has finally decided to intervene and terminated Registerfly’s accreditation. This is yet another case in the confused realm of internet governance, where the question of who controls what is still blurred – sadly at the cost of internet users.
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