nanog mailing list archives

Re: Is the .to (Tonga) domain completely rogue and should be removed?


From: Karl Mueller <karl () best net>
Date: Thu, 1 Oct 1998 16:09:16 -0700 (PDT)


Nobody warned me that Jim Fleming had a brother!  Ayeiii....

We now return you to TongaV8, in progress..

Karl 


Not clear. Obviously .to is being run in a very unusual way. Among
other things, I guess the spammers can instantly sign up new domains
for their web sites as fast as .to can take them down (which isn't
very fast, but for discussion's sake.)

That's quite unusual, and the entire activity seems to have nothing to
do with the Kingdom of Tonga or any entitites within that country
except inasmuch as they seem to look the other way and probably get
some money for it (others have claimed this.)

But the proof is in the pudding, ADULTSIGHTS.COM is finding the way
the .to domain is being managed very useful to their mass spamming and
other criminal (e.g., domain hijacking) activities.

Taken togther, I say that's a problem. What should be done about it is
yet another question, of course.

Also, I'm not sure I agree with your characterization that businesses
etc which have registered a Tongan domain, but have no other
relationship with Tonga, are "legitimate".

They may be banal, harmless, other than what may well be prima facie
evidence of intent to defraud by advertising a business etc in a
country they don't actually have any presence in, but that doesn't
necessarily make the usage "legitimate".

I don't think I'd want to be on the wrong side of a court case, even
if unfair, with the other side pointing out that I was doing business
via a network address in the Kingdom of Tonga, unless I really had a
good reason for doing so other than "I thought the name was cute". The
law doesn't tend to look kindly on businesses which purposely
obfuscate their identity and whereabouts.


Current thread: