US gov't: 2.3M domain names registered with false data

09.12.2005
Approximately 2.3 million domain names have been registered with obviously false information, such as (999) 999-999 for a telephone number or "XXXXX" for a postal zip code, and another 1.6 million were registered with incomplete information, according to a report released yesterday by the U.S.

Government Accountability Office.

The GAO said individuals or organizations registering the names of their Web sites may have provided inaccurate information to domain name registrars to hide their identities or prevent the public from contacting them. The 3.9 million wrong or incomplete registrations represents 8.6 percent of the 44.9 million the agency was asked to check by Congress.

Contact information is made available online through a service known as Whois. Data accuracy in the Whois service can help law enforcement officials investigate the misuse of intellectual property and online fraud, as well as identify the source of spam and help Internet operators resolve technical network issues, the GAO said.

The GAO was asked to determine the prevalence of patently false or incomplete contact information in the Whois service for the .com, .org and .net domains. It was also asked to determine how much of the wrong information was corrected within a month of being reported to the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), the regulatory group that oversees the Internet's technical infrastructure. In addition, the GAO was asked to describe the steps taken by the U.S. Department of Commerce and ICANN to ensure the accuracy of contact data in the Whois database.

Since 1998, the Commerce Department has been party to a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with ICANN that recognizes it as the private-sector not-for-profit corporation that should assume a set of technical coordination and related policy development responsibilities for the Internet.