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Trusted Notifier

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Revision as of 17:18, 7 April 2022 by Jessica (talk | contribs)

A Trusted Notifier is a designated entity for alerting registries about illegal activity, content, and/or DNS abuse associated with a domain name. Trusted Notifiers enter into written agreements with registries or registrars, which outline the roles and responsibilities for handling reports of abuse. All action is still determined by the Registrar or Registry.[1]

Characteristics

Trusted notifiers tend to have a higher level of confidence in reporting malicious activity than outside referrals. However, not all notifiers are “Trusted Notifiers.” What makes a notifier trusted? The organization:[2]

  • has strong, demonstrated subject matter expertise
  • shows consistent adherence to substantive, procedural due diligence
  • rigorously reports
  • is committed to a low false-positive rate and the accuracy of its notices
  • has an enumerated challenge process for registrants

Example Programs

  • The NTIA and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)'s trusted notifier pilot program curbs access to illegal online opioid sales by working with domain name registries.[3]
  • TWNIC and .Asia announced a trusted notifier fast track mechanism in March 2022.[4]
  • The MPAA is treated as a Trusted Notifier for reporting large-scale pirate websites registered in a domain extension operated by Donuts, as announced in February 2016.[5]

References