It looks like hardcore porn is hitting the IE namespace.
Although it is not possible to register porn.ie the domain orn.ie has been registered and if you add a "p" you get p.orn.ie, which is now serving hardcore adult content. (Definitely NOT safe for work!)
Interestingly enough the site is actually hosted in Ireland as well.
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About this Entry
This page contains a single entry by Michele Neylon published on August 19, 2007 4:23 PM.
CyberSquatters Covered in Sunday Times - bebo.ie was the previous entry in this blog.
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And you found this out how?
;-)
Daithi
That would be telling :)
Seriously though .. I work in the domain industry and write about it plus do interviews with the media etc., so there are a multitude of very valid reasons why I would stumble on it. Of course I could simply have been looking for porn as well :)
Michele
There's probably a few more sites like that. EUBrowser has quite a few that make the whole porn.ie debacle very hypocritical.
Here was I thinking "Must send this to Daithí as he might find it interesting for his media law research". He got here before me. How did *you* notice this post above others Daithí? :)
Holy crap, just visited, that really is hardcore.
Perhaps it will give you something real to write about in your Sunday Tribune op-ed column Damien. :)
fair play for the link!
Quick, someone register .ireachtas.ie!
Apparently it is a registered business name for sole trader Steve Ryan, sez whois.
And then there's this thread: http://www.irishwebmasterforum.com/domains-domaining/1676-iedr-trying-terminate-domain-orn-ie.html
All good clean fun :)
Nah John, not interested in writing about porn, but work away if you want to.
I don't write for the Sunday Tribune Damien,
It couldn't afford my rates. Though the state of .ie and how problematic registrations are dealt with is a good story but it would involve real journalism rather than mere outraged op-eds. :)
Oh yes, I forgot that you don't write for anyone.
Well technology journalism is such a competitive field and anyone can claim to be a technology journalist. The sad thing is that they usually do.
If you haven't the journalistic instinct to recognise a good story when it appears then you are no different to those other "technology" journalists who merely recycle press releases and write op-eds that are the equivalent of an ode to lump of green putty you found in your armpit one morning. (H2G reference.)
The handling of problematic registrations is an important aspect of .ie and to date there has been very little discussion of it. The porn.ie and orn.ie cases are good examples of how a poorly thought out reaction can create further issues. But putting porn.ie on the Forbidden list it forced people into other actions. The lack of a clear policy on these domains and other activity is damaging to the credibility of .ie ccTLD.
John
There are a couple of aspects of the policy that are downright silly.
Some of them are being dealt with, whereas others haven't been at all.
The entire porn.ie thing is just silly. I tried to register it on multiple occasions until they eventually blocked it.
Michele
There doesn't seem to be a policy Michele,
All these applications are dealt with on a case by case basis. That level of uncertainty is not good for the industry.
John
They refer to 3.4 in the naming policy normally. See one of my previous posts on the subject:
http://www.mneylon.com/blog/archives/2005/07/04/is-the-irish-internet-prudish/
Michele
haha, Steve finally got away with it ;)
It was bound to happen sooner or later.
What about pr0n.ie? ;]
Oh, we're all sinners...
> Taps fingers waiting for some bishop to tell us where it all went wrong for little Ireland.