Italian Naming Rules
SECTION
1 - Assignment Rules
1. PURPOSE
The present Rules contain the norms for the assignment of domain names
within the ccTLD "it" (Italy), both for the Internet Protocol
Suite (IPS) standard and the Open System Interconnection (OSI) standard.
The following Rules and the procedures which constitute the base of the
Registration Authority Italiana (RA) operations are defined by the Naming
Authority Italiana (NA).
Declaratory note: the principal concepts and terms used in these Rules,
in the Technical Registration Procedures and in the referenced documents
are described in a specially created "Tutorial" available from
the NA. The tutorial is by no way part of the regulations and cannot be
used as a probe document; it is made available to the readers for a purely
didactic informative purpose.
2. TASKS OF THE REGISTRATION AUTHORITY ITALIANA
The RA manages and maintain the database of domain names under the ccTLD
"it", also named as "Registro dei Nomi Assegnati" (Assigned
Names Registry) (RNA). The general RA operating procedures are drawn from
the ISO 9834-1, RFC1591 and ICANN ICP-1 specification, and their subsequent
updates.
The RA must verify that domain name assignment requests conform to the
Rules and Technical Registration Procedures.
The RA provides for the registration and assignment in use of the following
objects related to domain names within the ccTLD "it" (ISO 3166),
including the geographic section:
a) domain names according to the ISO/IEC 10021 standard and subsequent
updates;
b) domain names according to the IPS RFC822, RFC1034, RFC1035 standards
and subsequent updates;
c) mapping rules between the ISO/IEC 10021 (ITU X.400) and IPS RFC822 standards
according to the IPS MIXER (RFC2156) standard and subsequent updates;
d) "relative distinguished names" according to the ITU X.500
standard and subsequent updates.
3. DOMAIN NAMES
Domain names are assigned by the RA to registrants following the requests
chronological order, as defined by the Technical Registration Procedures
Domain names have the only purpouse to identify uniquely groups of objects
(services, machines, post boxes etc.) located on the net.
4. REGISTRATION
Domain names within the ccTLD "it" can be assigned to subjects
belonging to a member state of the European Union. Associations without
VAT numbers or fiscal code (or equivalent) and persons not owning a VAT
number (or equivalent) can register a single domain name, only.
5. STRUCTURE OF THE TREE OF ITALIAN DOMAIN NAMES
Domain names can be assigned directly under the ccTLD "it"
or else under the predefined geographic structure.
The predefined geographic structure is constructed with the names and
abbreviations of the Italian provinces and regions, as well, under the
provinces, as the names of Italian councils.
The domain names which constitute the predefined geographic structure
form a hierarchical container for other domain names (functionally equivalent
to a ccTLD or gTLD) and as such are not assignable.
The complete geographic structure of the tree of Italian domain names
is given in the document "Reserved Domain Names" available from
the NA.
6. REGISTRATION OBLIGATION
For all domain names placed directly under the ccTLD "it" or
directly under the predefined geographic structure registration with the
RA is obligatory.
7. RESERVED NAMES
Some domain names are reserved, and as such are not assignable, or are
assignable only to predetermined subjects.
Domain names constituted by only one or two characters are not assignable:
directly under the ccTLD "it" (IPS);
as a PRMD (ISO/IEC 10021) field;
as an Org (X.500) field;
The list of reserved domain names, given in the document "Reserved
Domain Names", is an integral part of the present naming rules and
is available from the NA.
The domain names, listed in the reserved domain names and belonging to
the predefined geographic structure registered in a date older than their
definition as reserved names, can be used by the assegnee for at maximum
of one year after the date they have been declared as reserved names. Afterwards,
these neames will be used as described into the naming rules and procedures.
8. Previous domain names and bookings
Domain names cannot be booked.
A domain name assigned within the name space under the ccTLD "it"
cannot be considered as prereserved in other positions of the same name
tree.
9. Assignment of a domain name
The domain name assignment procedure concludes when it is loaded into
the RAN. This is effected only when the RA has received all of the documentation
requested and the effective functionality of the name has been verified,
i.e.:
the correct operation of the authoritative nameservers of the domain
name and the accessibility of the "postmaster" address for the
domain name in the case of IPS and ISO/IEC 10021; the correct operation
and the accessibility of the DSA in the case of ITU X.500.
10. Transfer and modification of an assigned domain name
A domain name can be transferred upon agreement of the parties, or following
a specific or universal succession, or at the end of a reassignment procedure
run in accordance with art.16. It is anyhow forbidden to forestall and
cybersquat domain names.
A suspended or challenged domain name according to art.14 can be transferred
only to the subject that has submitted it to the challenge procedure. Once
the challenged status of a domain name is over, the assignee can transfer
it to anybody.
Universal or specific succession cases excepted, a modification request
of an assigned domain name, including the position change within the Italian
domain name tree, is considered in all respects as a cancellation of the
domain name previously assigned joint with a new domain name request.
11. Annulment of the assignment of a domain name
The RA may annul the assignation of a domain name only:
a) following renunciation on the part of the assignee; or
b) officially
c) following judicial sentence of arbitration decision.
11.1 Annulment as a result of renunciation
Where annulment is a result of renunciation of the domain name on the
part of the assignee, if requested by the assignee the RA is obliged to
ensure the maintenance of the old domain name for a maximum period of six
months.
11.2 Official annulment
The RA officially annuls the assignment of a domain name in the following
cases:
shortcoming of the objective and subjective elements which have determined
the assignment of a domain in the ccTLD "it", where expected;
failure to present the documents requested by the RA according to article
13.3 below:
the non "visibility/accessibility" of the objects belonging
to the assigned domain name for more than three months. Verification of
this lack of "visibility/accessibility" must be effected technically
by the RA. In this case the domain name cannot be reassigned to others
within a month from the date of annulment.
11.3 Annulment in view of judicial sentence or arbitration decision
The RA annuls the assignment of a domain name in view of a judicial sentence
or arbitration decision which establishes that the assignee did not have
rights to its use. A suspended domain name cannot be reassigned for others
until its annulment.
A domain name annulled according to the substance of the previous comma
is immediately rendered available for assignment to subjects other that
the previous assignee, except in the case of explicit indication to the
contrary expressed within the judicial sentence or arbitration decision.
12. Suspension of the assignation of a domain name
The RA can suspend the assignation of a domain name only:
a) on orders from the authorities, or
b) upon request by the assignee.
12.1 Suspension on orders from the authorities
The RA suspends the assignation of a domain name on orders from the judicial
authorities noted to them in legal terms, or cautionary precautions communicated
by the arbitration body, wherewith the use of the domain name on the part
of the assignee is inhibited.
The domain name thus suspended is reactivated for the original assignee
only in view of an executive proceeding on the part of the judicial or
arbitration authority rejecting the requests of whomsoever disputed the
legitimacy of its use, or in view of the demonstration that the procedure,
in the ambit of which the suspension order was issued, has been extinguished.
The domain name suspended in accordance with the substance of the first
comma of the present article is revoked by the RA only in view of a judicial
sentence or arbitration decision which confirms the act of suspension or
declares that the assignee did not have rights to its use.
12.2 Suspension upon request of the assignee
The RA suspends a domain name upon request by the assignee whose use
of the same is disputed judicially.
In this hypothesis, the RA is bound to reactivate the domain name for
the original assignee upon request by the same.
13. Documentation for the assignment of a domain name
The request for a new domain name is made by way of an electronic form
containing the technical data necessary to its functionality and operation
forwarded by the provider/maintainer of the domain name to the RA and a
predefined letter of assumption of responsibility forwarded by the domain
name requester.
The RA accepts assignment requests only when accompanied by the above-
mentioned documentation, compiled in accordance with the instructions.
13.1 Letter of assumption of responsibility
The assignee of a domain name assumes full civil and penal responsibility
for the use of the same. To this end the requester is obliged to forward
to the RA a letter of assumption of responsibility (AR letter) according
to the format given by the RA.
In the AR letter the identificational data of the requester must be given.
The requester must also declare knowledge of the fundamental principals
of use of the resources and of the Internet, the norms given by the NA
and the principles expressed in the document "Netiquette" (available
from the NA) and must pledge to respect them.
In the AR letter, the requester may devolve the controversies relative
to the requested domain name to the arbitration committee constituted by
the RA.
13.2 Verification of the documentation
The RA, at its discretion, can request that it be furnished with documents
confirming declarations made in the AR letter.
Such documents must be received by the RA within 30 days from the request.
13.3 Failure to present the documents requested by the RA
It is the faculty of the RA to annul the assignment of the domain name
where:
the documentation is not received by the RA on schedule; or the requester
refuses to send the documentation; or it emerges that the declarations
made by the requester do not correspond to the truth.
13.4 Publication of the forms and instructions
The RA is obliged to render public and maintain on line on its own servers
the models for the forms and the letter of assumption of responsibility,
as well as the instructions for the registration of domain names and further
necessary particulars.
SECTION 2 - Resolution of Disputes
14. Disputation Procedure
Anyone can dispute with the RA the domain names assigned by it and in
use in the RAN.
14.1 Introduction to disputation
A dispute is begun by letter forwarded by registered post to the RA by
complainants professing to have been the subject to prejudice as a result
of an object assigned in use to (an) other(s).
The letter of dispute must contain the generalities of the sender, the
domain name disputed, the reasons for the dispute, the prejudice to which
the sender has been subject or the rights which are assumed by the same
to have been breached.
14.2 Procedures of the Registration Authority in the instance of dispute
In the presence of a dispute, the RA adds the note "valore contestato/challenged
value" to the value contained in the RAN, and notes there also the
date of the beginning of the dispute in a special file which, though not
accessible to the public, can be obtained on request.
Furthermore, within 10 working days of receipt of the dispute, the RA
informs the assignee via e-mail of the dispute, and invites both parties
to begin arbitration procedure in accordance with article 15 or a domain
name riassignement administrative procedure in accordance with article
16,
The communication to the assignee of the object disputed must contain
all of the information relevant to the dispute, including the data unavailable
for public access in the RAN.
The RA is obliged to furnish all of the data and documentation relative
to the object disputed to the party who requests it, subject to repayment
of expenses.
14.3 Pending Dispute
The RA does not participate in the resolution of a dispute, which, where
it cannot be brought about amicably, can be devolved by the interested
parties to the arbitration body, for which see article 15, or by action
of the challenger activating an adrministrative procedure as described
in article 16. The RA is not obliged to act in any further way until the
dispute has been resolved.
Pending dispute, the initiating party is obliged to confirm to the RA
at least once every six months its wish to keep the dispute pending and
its continued interest in the object disputed. Failing this, the RA will
consider the dispute resolved, unless it received communication of an existing
pending judgement, arbitration or administrative procedure regarding that
domain name.
14.4 Dispute Resolved
The RA considers a dispute resolved in the moment in which:
1) it receives a communication to this effect from all of the interested
parties; or
2) it receives an arbitration decision from the president of the arbitration
body on the question in conformance with the dictates of article 15.6 of
these rules; or
3) it receives notification of judicial sentence on the part of the judicial
authority, or arbitration decision which resolves the question; or
4) it receives a communication from the disputing party declaring the intention
to abandon the dispute; or
5) the previous assignee of the object disputed renounces the assignment;
or
6) one of the parties offers proof of the extinction of the judiciary procedure
undertaken for the resolution of the controversy; or
7) two years pass from the moment in which the dispute was begun without
any communication from the disputing party reaffirming the intention to
maintain the dispute; or
8) two years pass from the last reaffirmation of intention to maintain
the dispute; or
9) it receives the decision statement about an administrative procedure,as
described in art. 16, which transfers the domain name to the challengerparty;
or
10) it receives the decision statement about an administrative procedure,as
described in art. 16, which rejects the challenge.
A resolved dispute cannot be reproposed by the same parties for the same
domain name, unless the decision statement come as per the cases numbered
9 and 10 above in this paragraph.
14.5 Effects of the resolution of the dispute
Once the dispute has been resolved in accordance with the substance of
article 14.4, the RA:
a) if the resolution has come about * on the basis of points "4",
"6", "7" or "8" of article 14.4, or
* on the basis of point "10" of the preceding article 14.4, or
* on the basis of points "2" or "3" of the preceding
article 14.4 and the sentence or arbitration decision are favourable to
the assignee resisting the dispute, or
* on the basis of point "1" of the preceding article 14.4 and
the parties agree as to the legitimacy of the registration of the assignee
resisting the dispute, then the RA removes from the RNA the note "valore
contestato/challenged value" for the domain name challenged;
b) if the resolution has come about * on the basis of points "2"
or "3" of the preceding article 14.4 and the sentence or arbitration
decision are favourable to the challenger, or
* on the basis of point "9" of the preceding article 14.4, or
* on the basis of point "1" of the preceding article 14.4 and
the parties agree as to the illegitimacy of the registration of the assignee
resisting the dispute, or
* on the basis of point "5" of the preceding article 14.4 then
the RA removes the assignment of the domain name challenged;
14.6 Reassignment of the disputed and removed domain name
In the cases covered by point "b" of the preceding article
14.5, the removal of the domain name under dispute does not lead to its
automatic assignment to the party which initiated the dispute.
Once the dispute has been resolved, the RA does not render available
the disputed domain name for at least 30 days. The RA must also invite,
not more than 10 working days after the resolution of the dispute, the
disputing party to begin normal procedure for the assignment of the domain
name. If the procedure is not initiated within 30 days from the resolution
of the dispute, then the domain name cannot be reassigned to any body which
makes request for it to the RA.
15. Arbitration Committee
15.1 Arbitration clause
Whomsoever requests a domain name with the RA may engage, in the AR letter
or in a successive act, in the devolution to an informal arbitrator of
the eventual controversies connected to the assignment of the domain name
in question in accordance with the present naming rules, recognising as
valid and binding the decisions made by the arbitration body.
15.2 Constitution of the arbitration body
An arbitration body is formed by the NA. The committee is composed of
those members of the NA who have asked the president to be allowed to take
part, excluding the president, the vice-president and the Executive Commettee
Director on duty.
The list of the arbiters nominated by the Executive Committee who are
members of the arbitration committee is available from the secretary of
the NA.
15.3 Composition of the arbitration body
The arbitration body is composed of three arbiters who are members of
the arbitration committee; one member is chosen by each disputing party
while the third, who acts as president of the arbitration body, is chosen
by the two aforechosen arbiters.
The party wishing to initiate arbitration procedure is obliged to proceed
with the nomination of an arbiter via registered post letter forwarded
to the defendant, to the arbiter nominated and to the President of the
NA. The letter must include the name of the chosen arbiter among those
who make up the arbitration committee, the object of the question to be
submitted to the arbitration body, the factual and legal reasons on which
it is founded, conclusions, domestic address and e-mail address, as well
as the invitation to the other party to nominate an arbiter from the members
of the arbitration committee.
The party to whom the invitation to nominate an arbiter is addressed
is obliged to do so, in accordance with the procedures given in the previous
comma, within 10 working days of receipt. Failing this, the party submitting
said invitation may ask for the nomination to be made by the President
of the NA, who will proceed with the nomination of an arbiter within 5
working days from the request. The nomination is communicated to the parties
via e-mail.
The party arbiters thus nominated choose the president of the arbitration
body within five working days of the latest nomination on the part of the
disputing bodies. Where this choice is not made in time the more diligent
party may ask for the nomination of the third arbiter to be made by the
President of the NA, who will proceed with the nomination of an arbiter
within 5 working days from the request. The nomination is communicated
to the parties via e-mail.
The arbitration body is considered constituted from the day following
the acceptance of the task on the part of the president of the same body.
The arbiters must come to a decision within 90 days of the constitution
of the arbitration body.
15.4 Procedure before the arbitration body
The president of the body may nominate a secretary to assist during the
process and take minutes of the sittings in which the parties or their
representatives are heard.
The arbitration body may regulate the process of judgement in the manner
it maintains most appropriate, as long as respect for the examination is
assured. It is in all cases obliged to concede a period not less than 10
working days to each party to present their respective defences and documentation,
and a further period not less than 10 working days for responses, as well
as to convoke personally the parties and hear them in examination where
this is requested by one or both of them. Before the arbitration body either
party may be represented by another person, except where the arbitration
body deems it necessary for them to be heard in person.
Communications of the arbitration body to the parties, the exchange of
minutes and responses may take place via e-mail, except where the parties
explicitly request paper documentation, or where it is necessary to exchange
or examine original documentation which cannot be transmitted via e-mail.
15.5 Safeguarding powers and instructors of the arbitration body
Where there are serious reasons, upon request from one of the parties
the arbitration body may take safeguarding measures relative to the domain
name and to the assigned domain name under dispute. The RA is obliged to
put such measures into place immediately.
Where instruction is necessary, the arbitration body may delegate the
proceedings of instruction to one only of the arbiters. The RA is bound
to furnish the arbitration body with all of the information requested.
15.6 Decision of the arbitration body
The arbiters pass judgement according to equity, in the quality of amicable
components, on the basis of the present naming rules and the Italian ordination
norms.
The president of the arbitration body informs the parties, the President
and Executive Committee of the NA and the RA of the definitive decision
via registered post. The decisions of the arbitration body are kept by
the secretary of the NA and are placed at the disposal of the members of
the arbitration body. The arbitration decision is rendered public by the
president of the NA, except where the arbitration body, upon request from
one of the parties, decides to the contrary.
The decision of the arbitration body is unappealable.
The decisions of the arbitration body are put into execution by the RA
within five working days of the receipt of the same.
15.7 Compensation of the arbitration body and expenses.
Upon the decision, the arbiters liquidate their compensation along with
that of the secretary of the body, charging them, partially or entirely,
to the losing party. On request of either one of the parties, the body
may order the losing party to compensate, partially or in total, the expenses
sustained by the winning party, determining them, if necessary, according
to fairness.
The compensation which the arbitration body liquidates to the arbiters
for the judgement cannot be superior to half of the maximum set out by
the current forensic tariff at the moment of the decision.
16. Disputed domain name reassignment procedure
16.1 Enforceability of procedure
The claimant may request that the registered domains, which have been
challenged under art. 14, undergo this Reassignment procedure.
The administrative procedure is applicable to all domain names registered
under the ccTLD "it".
16.2 Nature of procedure
The purpose of the procedure is to check the entitlement to use or legal
availability of the domain name by the registrant, and that the domain
has not been registered and is not maintained in bad faith.
The procedure is not of a jurisdictional nature, and, as such, does not
prevent the parties from appealing, even at a later time, to the court
of law or arbitration as provided by art. 15 of the naming rules.
16.3 Procedure, arbitration and appeal to the court of law.
The procedure shall be enforced and administered by special organisations,
called the "administrators", provided they fulfil the requirements
established by the Naming Authority.
Those who challenge a domain name shall be responsible for the selection
of an administrator to enforce and administer the procedure. All costs
related to the procedure shall be the sole responsibility of those who
dispute a domain name.
The procedure cannot be started pending another judgement related to
the disputed domain name before the ordinary judge or the board of arbitrators,
as provided by art.15 of the naming rules. If a judgement is filed before
the ordinary judge or an arbitration procedure is started as provided by
art. 15 of the naming rules pending the Procedure, then the Procedure shall
be extinguished.
16.4 Sources of procedure
The Procedure shall be ruled by:
a) these naming rules;
b) the rules contained in the document "Domain name reassignment procedure",
which are an integral part of the naming rules;
c) the optional implementation provisions set forth by the administrators
and approved of to the purposes of art.16.5, sub-section II, below.
16.5 Supervision of administrators
The organisations under art. 16.3, sub-section I, may adopt their own
implementation provisions for a better definition of the procedure. The
implementation provisions cannot conflict with the naming rules and shall
refer to such aspects as fees, procedure length limits, set-up directives,
communication means between administrators and boards, as well as all forms.
Such implementation provisions shall be approved of by the Executive Committee.
The NA President shall be responsible for checking the requirements of
the organisations which apply for the enforcement and administration of
a Procedure and for checking the work of such organisations. If an administrator
repeatedly breaches the procedural or merit rules, the NA President may
exempt the administrator from the administration of the procedures.
16.6 Transfer of a disputed domain name
The procedures shall cover any domain name with respect to which a third
party (hereinafter referred to as the "claimant") states the
following:
a) that the disputed domain name is the same or such as to mislead with
respect to a trade mark on which the claimant claims rights, or with respect
to the claimant's name and surname; and that
b) the existing assignee (hereinafter referred to as the "defendant")
has no right or title with respect to the disputed domain name; and, finally,
that
c) the domain name has been registered and is used in bad faith.
If the claimant proves the co-existence of the three conditions above,
the disputed domain name shall be transferred to the claimant.
With respect to the point b) above of this article, the defendant shall
be deemed as entitled to the disputed domain name if the defendant proves
that:
1) before being informed of the dispute, he used or objectively got ready
to use the domain name or a name corresponding to the same to supply goods
and services to the public; or
2) that he is known personally, as an association or commercial organisation,
with the name which corresponds to the registered domain name, even if
he has not registered the related trade mark; or
3) that he is making lawful use of the domain name for non-commercial purposes,
or for commercial purposes without the intention to mislead the claimant's
customers or breach the claimant's registered trade mark.
16.7 Proof of registration and maintenance of the domain in bad faith
The following circumstances, if proved, shall be considered as evidence
of registration and use of the domain in bad faith.
a) Any circumstance which may cause the domain name to be considered
as having been registered for the main purpose to sell, transfer the domain
name for use or otherwise, to the claimant (who holds rights in the trade
mark or name) or one of his competitors, for a consideration, either money
or other, exceeding the costs reasonably incurred into by the defendant
for registration and maintenance of the domain name;
b) The circumstance of the domain having been registered by the defendant
in order to prevent the holder of an identical trade mark from registering
such domain name as his own, and it being used for activities which compete
with the claimant's activities;
c) The circumstance of the domain name having been registered by the defendant
for the main purpose of damaging a competitor's business or usurp the claimant's
name and surname;
d) The circumstance of the domain name having been expressly used to attract
Internet users, for profit, by originating reasons for confusing it with
the claimant's trade mark.
The listing above is only an example. The board of arbitrators can, therefore,
argue other elements of bad faith in the registration and use of the domain
name, even from circumstances other than those listed above.
16.8 Multiple procedures
If multiple procedures are started with respect to one domain name, those
which have been started after the first one shall be suspended pending
the outcome of the first one started. If the first procedure started concludes
with the transfer of the disputed domain name to the claimant, the other
procedures shall be extinguished.
16.9 Role of the Naming Authority
The Naming Authority has no relation to the procedure and shall not be
responsible for the work of the administrators which enforce the procedures.
16.10 Publication of deliberations
The list of pending procedurs and the deliberations on the procedures
shall be made public in the web site of the Naming Authority and in the
web site of the administrator to which the deliberating board belongs,
unless such board, under exceptional circumstances and by taking justified
measures, decides not to publish all or part of it.
16.11 Enforcement of deliberation
If the board decides that the disputed domain name is to be reassigned,
the board's deliberation shall be enforced by the Registration Authority,
unless the latter receives, within 15 days from reception of the board's
deliberation, a suitably documented release from the defendant that the
defendant has filed legal proceedings or arbitration with respect to the
disputed domain name. In this case, the rules under articles 15.5 and 14.6
shall apply.
The documented release described in the previous sub-section must be
supported within 10 days by the photo-copy of the official act notification
introducing the judgement. In case the above documentation is not produced
within 10 days,or if the judgment has started later than the terms specified
in the first sub-section, the RA shall proceed with the domain name reassignemnt.
If the legal proceedings or arbitration filed by the defendant are extinguished,
the Registration Authority shall enforce the board's deliberation on the
claimant's request.
16.12 Cost of procedure
The cost of procedure shall amount to at least 400 euros (plus V.A.T.,
if applicable). 5% of the cost shall belong to to NA, as a lump-sum reimbursement
of the costs incurred for the enforcement of deliberations.
17. Procedure administrators' requirements
17.1 Subjective requirements
The Procedures may be enforced by public or individual legal persons
or by professional firms incorporated in the European Union.
17.2 Submission of applications
Applications for admission to the administration of procedures shall
be submitted to the President of the Naming Authority, who shall decide
within 20 days from the submission of the applications.
The application shall indicate:
a) The administrator's name and legal representative;
b) Date of incorporation;
c) Name and address of the person in charge of the administration of procedures;
d) The criteria which have been and which shall be followed by the administrator
in the selection of his arbitrators;
e) The administrator's URL;
f) Number of Procedures the administrator considers he will be able to
administrate monthly;
g) Cost of Procedure in the event of a single-person board or three-people
board.
The administrator's application shall state the following:
a) that the administrator shall be subject to the rules laid down by the
Naming Authority and accepts any variation that should be made to them
over time;
b) that the arbitrators listed are familiar with the naming rules and the
rules laid down for the enforcement of the procedures;
c) that his arbitrators are free to act on their own right also with other
administrators.
The application shall enclose the following:
a) A list of at least 15 people, with the relevant qualifications, who
accept to act as arbitrators in domain name reassignment procedures;
b) The text of any enforcement rule that the administrator intends to follow
during the enforcement of the Procedures.
c) the arbitrators' acceptance of being included in the list under point
a) of this sub-section.
In submitting the application, the administrator shall make accessible
to the NA President the URL where the indications contained in the application
and the annexes as per points a) and b) of the sub-section above of this
article are published.
17.3 Acceptance of application
The President of the Naming Authority shall accept the applications and
authorise the administrators whose applications comply with the provisions
laid down by art. 17.2 and whose enforcement rules, if any, do not conflict
with the naming rules.
The rejection of the application shall be justified and shall not prevent
the administrator from submitting a new application.
If no negative decision is issued within 20 days from submission of the
application, the application shall be considered as accepted.
17.4 Qualification for administration of procedures
The acceptance of the application shall authorise the applicant to administrate
the procedures. The administrator shall be authorised to start working
as such, provided he publicly opens the URL, under art 17.2, last sub-section,
of the indications contained in the applications and annexes under art.
17.2 sub-section IV, points a) and b).
17.5 Revocation of qualification
The President of the Naming Authority shall revoke the qualification
for the administration of procedures under the following circumstances:
a) the administrator is subject to winding-up or bankruptcy proceedings;
b) the number of his arbitrators drops below 15;
c) the boards are proved to have generally breached the procedural rules;
d) the information supplied in the application is proved to be false.
|