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As I understand it you have to be a US citizen or company to register a .us domain. Does that also apply to the aftermarket? I'm a UK citizen and would like to buy an existing .us name - can I ?
Yes, the usTLD Nexus Requirements DOES apply to the aftermarket.Graham Easton said:Does that also apply to the aftermarket?
With a bit more resources and *some* determination from the registry, the rules can be enforced with no problem. (Just take a look at the RIAA's legal "shows".) But the bottom line is: we don't break the law just because we can, do we?Graham Easton said:I don't see how that can be policed.
Graham Easton said:As I understand it you have to be a US citizen or company to register a .us domain. Does that also apply to the aftermarket? I'm a UK citizen and would like to buy an existing .us name - can I ?
Graham Easton said:I don't see how that can be policed. I have an American friend through whom I could buy the domain and then I'd simply make it private and use for my own purposes. Anyone see any problems with that?
Yes, just go through the usTLD Nexus Requirements link I posted earlier, and you can tell that it's not difficult at all to "abide" to that. LOL!Mr Webname said:Commercially - you don't even have to do that, it's done all of the time either by deception or by a wide interpretation of Nexus Category 3.
Law or just rules. Of course, a lot of people park their car in spaces reserved specifically for the physically challenged (handicapped).Graham Easton said:Depends upon whether you think domain registration as a law.