Public Records Questioned on Web 

                                                   By ANICK JESDANUN, AP Internet 
Writer


                                                        MARINA DEL REY, Calif.--As 
more individuals build their own Web sites,
                                                   some privacy advocates now question 
requirements that the site owners disclose
                                                   their personal contact information. 
                                                        Names, e-mail addresses, 
postal addresses and telephone numbers for more
                                                   than 24 million domain names are 
stored in databases called Whois. The
                                                   information is available to anyone 
with an Internet connection. 
                                                        Its like a global phone 
directory -without the option for an unlisted number. 
                                                        "Sacrificing your privacy 
should not be a condition of access to the domain
                                                   space," said Alan Davidson, staff 
counsel with the Center for Democracy and
                                                   Technology. 
                                                        Most people may not care and 
would list their contact information anyway,
                                                   just like most telephone customers 
now list their numbers. 
                                                        But Davidson said Internet 
users ought to have a choice -for instance, they
                                                   may want to stay anonymous if they 
are human rights advocates and other
                                                   dissidents fearful of repercussion 
from oppressive governments. 
                                                        Ellen Rony, author of the 
Domain Name Handbook, said she knew of
                                                   someone stalked based on 
information from the databases. 
                                                        On the other hand, she said, 
the tool proves helpful for researchers to gauge
                                                   the origins and veracity of Web 
sites, and the stalking incident appears an
                                                   aberration. 
                                                        "I can see both sides," she 
said. "Historically, Whois is always public." 
                                                        The Internet Corporation for 
Assigned Names and Numbers, which oversees
                                                   the master record keeper of Web 
addresses and the domain registration
                                                   companies, currently requires 
disclosure of contact information for holders of
                                                   .com, .net and .org names. 
                                                        Andrew McLaughlin, ICANNs 
chief policy officer, said the organization may
                                                   have to revisit Whois policies next 
year, but it is not on the agenda for its annual
                                                   meeting this week. 
                                                        Part of the drive comes from 
the European Union, which passed a law
                                                   prohibiting the transfer of data to 
the United States and other non-EU countries
                                                   that dont meet EU standards for 
protecting personal information. 
                                                        Back in the 1980s, when the 
Whois database was developed, Internet privacy
                                                   wasnt a big deal. The Internet was 
mostly a research tool for government and
                                                   universities. 
                                                        "We all knew each other," said 
Karl Auerbach, a longtime Internet user who
                                                   was recently elected to ICANN. 
                                                        But these days, Auerbach said, 
that same Whois database creates unwanted
                                                   e-mail and unsolicited phone calls. 
                                                        Davidson said times have 
changed, and the Internet must change as well. 
                                                        "Now, you have regular people 
using it and theres a much greater need to
                                                   protect privacy," he said. 
                                                        Registration companies offer 
access to the databases in order to let users
                                                   determine whether the domain names 
they want are available. But when a name is
                                                   taken, the registrar often links to 
the records for that name as well. 
                                                        The idea is to help users 
contact the names owner for possible purchase, even
                                                   though the databases originally 
helped computer administrators contact one
                                                   another when networks go awry. 
                                                        Lawyers also use the databases 
to check on names that may tread on their
                                                   clients trademark rights. Steven J. 
Metalitz, vice president for the International
                                                   Intellectual Property Alliance, 
said such open access is important to deter abusers. 
                                                        At VeriSign Global Registry 
Services, which runs the databases for .com, .net
                                                   and .org, Vice President Chuck 
Gomes said technology may settle the issue in the
                                                   next year or two. 
                                                        New tools, he said, could help 
meet the needs of law enforcement officials and
                                                   trademark owners while protecting 
privacy for individuals in other circumstances. 
                                                        In the meantime, the records 
remain open, and many of the proposals for new
                                                   domain suffixes call for open Whois 
databases as well. 
                                                      "Its the model thats out there," 
said John Kane, head of a marketing task
                                                   force for Afilias, which is seeking 
a .web suffix. "Its a public resource. You dont
                                                   own a domain name. You own the 
right to use it." 

  http://www.latimes.com/wires/20001115/tCB00V0232.html



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