[At-Large] Impressions from the Whois-Review

Omar Kaminski omar at kaminski.adv.br
Mon Jan 31 19:23:02 UTC 2011


And how about the so called proxies?

Omar


2011/1/31 Patrick Vande Walle <patrick at vande-walle.eu>:
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> On 31 Jan 2011, at 20:01, Avri Doria wrote:
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>>> This being said, I would tend to agree with Neil that the WHOIS might contain clues that eventually lead to the criminal. It is certainly useful to an extend to LEAs.
>>> But that does not mean that the WHOIS should be open to all.  To take an example that has already been mentioned : the car registration plate databases are open to LEAs, possibly insurance companies, emergency services, etc. But these parties are clearly identified. This is not the case with the WHOIS. It is open to all, including the bad guys. The "good guys" that could justify a genuine interest to the WHOIS can certainly be identified and be granted unlimited WHOIS access.
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>> I was with you until you said unlimited access.
>> I would thank that rarely would anyone merit unlimited access. I would think most access would need to be subject to due process.
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>> But certainly the idea that there are access rights that can be granted and withdrawn for specific purposes within the bounds of applicable law is reasonable.
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> I meant  "access to the full set of data", as opposed to a very limited set of data that would be granted to Joe Public.  But indeed, there should be limits to the number of queries per day, for example. And of course, access could be revoked in case of "bad behaviour" (TBD).
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