NEWS VeriSign, the administrator of the .com and .net domains, made plans to shut down its new Site Finder service on Friday, after the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ordered the company to undo controversial changes. In a letter sent to VeriSign on Friday, ICANN CEO Paul Twomey told the domain name registrar that it had until 6 p.m. PDT Saturday to comply with a request to take down the SiteFinder service. Icann is the nonprofit organisation responsible for administering internet addresses. Site Finder, introduced 15 September, includes a "wildcard" feature that redirects all misspelled or unassigned .com and .net domain names to a search page owned by VeriSign. Before that, requests for nonexistent, reserved or inactive domain names would generate an error message. Russell Lewis, executive vice president of VeriSign's Naming and Directory Services Group, said in a statement: "Without so much as a hearing, Icann today formally asked us to shut down the Site Finder service. We will accede to the request while we explore all of our options." As of 3:30 pm PDT Friday, the site was still up. VeriSign administers the main database of who owns which names in the .com and .net top-level domains. By adding a wildcard - a domain name system (DNS) entry that catches any request that doesn't match an address in the database - VeriSign extended its control to unregistered domains. Three companies that compete with VeriSign subsidiary Network Solutions have filed lawsuits, claiming the move is an unfair business practice. In addition, at least seven organisations have criticised VeriSign's wildcard change, including the Internet Society, the Public Interest Registry and several engineering groups within Icann. These groups say the change causes havoc with applications such as spam filters and mail servers that rely on an internet server returning an error message when a domain does not exist. "Based on the information currently available to us, it appears that these changes have had a substantial adverse effect on the core operation of the DNS, on the stability of the internet and on the relevant domains," Twomey wrote in the Icann letter. He concluded: "The only prudent course of action consistent with Icann's coordination mission is to insist that VeriSign suspend these changes pending further evaluation and study." Site Finder web pages generated when web users reach inactive domains offer a search box and a "Did You Mean?" listing of similar domain names to users who mistyped a domain name. The page also has a listing of popular categories that might be related to a specific search request. VeriSign stated that internet users had visited the page more than 40 million times in the last three weeks. "The service has been well received by millions of internet users who appreciate getting navigation tools as opposed to the 'dead end' of an error message," VeriSign's Lewis said in the statement. However, competitors claim that the site allows VeriSign - and its Network Solutions registrar subsidiary - undue influence over registrations in the .com and .net domains. Internet service providers have criticised the service as making the internet more complex. On 21 September, Icann asked VeriSign to voluntarily remove the service while the group's engineering teams studied the effects of the change, but the company declined to do so. Instead, it created its own technical review board to analyse customers' and competitors' claims. Moreover, VeriSign disputed the technical case, saying the change hadn't provably degraded the internet. "During the more than two weeks that Site Finder has been operational, there is no data to indicate that the core operation of the Domain Name System or stability of the Internet has been adversely affected," Lewis said. "Icann is using anecdotal and isolated issues to attempt to regulate non-registry services, but in the interests of further working with the technical community, we will temporarily suspend Site Finder." Robert Lemos writes for CNET News.com
VeriSign drops Site Finder
No more .com detours
Post your comment
In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in.
You can also log in with Facebook. Log in or create your silicon.com account below
Latest Networks stories
Get silicon.com's daily newsletter
-

Enter your email to register
Featured white papers
-
Solution Brief: Optimizing Video Delivery with Blue Coat
Hosting and disseminating videos within your business offers a unique challenge to organizations with limitations in...
-
How to prime your WLAN for employee devices
The modern smart device has had a transformative effect on the enterprise. One result of this transformation of...
-
12 tips for better video conferencing
Travel is expensive in terms of both money and time. Interestingly, however, when 1,188 video conferencing users...
Popular Networks stories
Keep in touch with silicon.com
-
Connect with silicon.com on Facebook
Discuss the news of the day with the silicon.com team
-
Follow silicon.com on Twitter
Get regular updates from the silicon.com editors
-
Join the silicon.com LinkedIn networking group
Network with your peers and share expertise
Latest jobs
-
Architect Java, J2EE, Oracle, Spring London £55-65K
Java, J2EE, Oracle, PL/SQL, SQL, Spring, Struts, Maven, Swing Java, J2EE, Oracle My client a premiere...
-
Business Analyst ( ISEB, CBAP, BA, Analyst)
Business Analyst ( ISEB, CBAP, BA, Analyst) £31,000-£42,000 + excellent benefits We take the best Business...
-
Head of Financial Accounts
A large and forward thinking NHS organisation at the forefront of the NHS change agenda currently seeks an Interim...
silicon.com newsletters
-
Stay up to date with silicon.com newsletters
Keep up with the latest news and analysis from silicon.com with our free email newsletters




