To:
Eugenio Pinto <eugenio.pinto@fccn.pt>
CC:
ietf-provreg@cafax.se
From:
Werner Staub <werner@axone.ch>
Date:
Thu, 31 Jan 2008 15:05:40 +0100
In-Reply-To:
<47A1BB26.30502@fccn.pt>
Sender:
owner-ietf-provreg@cafax.se
User-Agent:
Thunderbird 2.0.0.9 (Macintosh/20071031)
Subject:
Re: [ietf-provreg] restore report
Hi Eugenio, In the case of a thick registry, where the contact information is stored in the registry, all the restore report does is send data to the registry that the registry already has. Therefore, for a thick registry, it is best to eliminate the restore report requirement altogether. The question of who may restore a domain is an entirely different matter. Your suggestion of allowing restore by another registrar based on the authinfo definitely looks like a good idea to me. Regards, Werner Eugenio Pinto wrote: > Hi again! > > I already know what it is (http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3915.txt) > > What I would like to know now is if any Registry is asking for a restore > report when some registrar issues a restore request? > > And if you allow another registrar (not the sponsoring registrar) to > issue a restore request using the auth code (given by the registrant) in > order to immediately transfer and also restore that domain in one step? > > Is this a bad idea? Do you allow a pendingDelete domain to be transfered > to another registrar in any way? > > Best Regards, > Eugenio > > > Eugenio Pinto wrote: >> Hi all! >> >> Sorry for the question, but can anyone tell me what is a restore >> report? (what is it for?)