 We learned from the BBC that The Pirate Bay, now officially owned by a Seychelles-based company called Riversella Ltd, was yet again involved in court proceedings. This time a Dutch court ordered The Pirate Bay's founders to remove all links to the material of a group of Dutch music and film makers. The case was brought by Stichting Brein against The Pirate Bay's former spokesperson Peter Sunde and its other founders Frederik Neij and Gottfrid Svartholmmen.
We learned from the BBC that The Pirate Bay, now officially owned by a Seychelles-based company called Riversella Ltd, was yet again involved in court proceedings. This time a Dutch court ordered The Pirate Bay's founders to remove all links to the material of a group of Dutch music and film makers. The case was brought by Stichting Brein against The Pirate Bay's former spokesperson Peter Sunde and its other founders Frederik Neij and Gottfrid Svartholmmen.  Denic softens its registration rules: last year the Higher Regional Court of Frankfurt decided that Denic, the German central registry operator of the .de top level domain, had to register the domain http://www.vw.de/ as requested by Volkswagen AG. The court, inter alia, decided that Denic's refusal to register the domain was against competition laws due to Denic's dominant position (case ref. 11 U 32/04) on the market.
Denic softens its registration rules: last year the Higher Regional Court of Frankfurt decided that Denic, the German central registry operator of the .de top level domain, had to register the domain http://www.vw.de/ as requested by Volkswagen AG. The court, inter alia, decided that Denic's refusal to register the domain was against competition laws due to Denic's dominant position (case ref. 11 U 32/04) on the market. * One- and two-digit domains as well as domain names composed exclusively of numerals can now be registered.
* Domains identical with combinations of letters that are used for motor-vehicle number plates or for TLDs are released for registration.
* A domain may be comprised of the digits 0-9, hyphens, the letters a-z of the Latin alphabet and the other letters listed in the currently valid annex to the Domain Guidelines.
* A domain must neither begin nor end with a hyphen. Neither must it have hyphens as both its third and fourth characters.
* The minimum length of a domain is one character.
* The maximum length of a domain is 63 characters (referred to the ACE-encoded form of the domain) - without .de respectively."
Denic's press release can be found here (in English).
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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