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Created page with "'''Domain Tasting''' involves registering domain names (often in bulk) and subsequently using the 5 day ICANN add grace period (AGP) to return names that do not have high..."
'''Domain Tasting''' involves registering domain names (often in bulk) and subsequently using the 5 day ICANN add grace period ([[AGP]]) to return names that do not have high enough traffic to offset their registration cost.<ref name="news">[http://www.icann.org/en/news/public-comment/domain-tasting-07mar08-en.htm Domain Tasting], Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN)</ref><ref name="whatis">[http://whatis.techtarget.com/definition/domain-tasting Domain Tasting] by Margaret Rouse (March 2008), WhatIs.com</ref> This practice is similar to [[Domain Kiting]].

==Public Perception==
The public perception of domain tasting is largely negative, and it is often viewed as abusing a loophole meant to correct user mistakes and accidental registrations.<ref>[http://www.icann.org/en/resources/registries/agp/agp-policy-17dec08-en.htm AGP (Add Grace Period) Limits Policy], Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN)</ref>

==Outcome==
The outcome of large scale domain tasting was mass registrations and then mass deletions within ICANN's AGP. This practice also made it difficult for individuals to register domain names as so many names were constantly being tasted by different speculators.

==Historical Use==
Domain tasting can be lucrative for investors as it allows them to try out domain names without penalty, often using advertising such Pay-Per-Click (PPC) ads; tasters can even make money in the 5-day grace period.<ref>[http://cs.en.todaynic.com/html/HNews/200810/14-337.html Taste Testing Domain Names Can Yield Big Dollars For Savvy Investors] (October 14, 2008), TodayNic.com</ref><ref name="news"/> ICANN's [[AGP|add grace period]] is supposed to provide registrants with the opportunity to return domain names that may have been "registered in error."<ref name="whatis"/> Mass domain tasting can be seen as an abuse of this period, making names that individuals or small businesses may want to register unavailable as they are tasted and adding to Internet clutter in the form of page solely devoted to advertising.<ref name="end">[https://www.icann.org/en/news/announcements/announcement-12aug09-en.htm The End of Domain Tasting | AGP Deletes Decrease 99.7%] (August 12, 2009), Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN)</ref><ref name="whatis"/> According to an ICANN outcome report on domain tasting, deletions of .coms and .nets were relatively stable before 2005 and then began to rapidly increase in 2006 and continued to climb in 2007, reaching between 50,000,000 and 60,000,000 deletions in March 2007.<ref>[http://www.icann.org/en/news/public-comment/domain-tasting-07mar08-en.htm Outcomes Report in October 2007] (PDF), Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN)</ref> This occurred as profitable speculation over domain names became more widespread. In the .com and .net space, according to a 2007 Verisign report, "the top ten domain tasters were responsible for 95% of all deleted .com and .net domain names: 45,450,897 of the total 47,824,131 deleted names."<ref name="whatis"/><ref name="verisign">[http://gnso.icann.org/issues/domain-tasting/gnso-domain-tasting-report-14jun07.pdf GNSO Issues Report on Domain Tasting] (2007), ICANN</ref> Additionally, based on the same Verisign report, the top 4 registrars participating in domain tasting accounted for 74% of all deleted names.<ref name="verisign"/>

==ICANN Policy==
**[[AGP]]: a policy that allows registrars to receive registry operator credit for names that are registered and then deleted within a five day period.<ref>https://www.icann.org/resources/pages/agp-policy-2008-12-17-en Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers</ref>
*Provision on AGP Deletes: this provision was adopted by ICANN in June 2008 as a temporary solution to the domain tasting epidemic and charged registrars 20 cents per deleted domain name over the specified conditions.<ref name="status report">[http://www.icann.org/en/resources/registries/agp/agp-status-report-12aug09-en.htm The End of Domain Tasting | Status Report on AGP Measures], Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN)</ref> The provision only applied if domain names deleted during the add grace period surpassed:
**"(i) 10 percent of that registrar's net new registrations in that month, or
**(ii) Fifty (50) domain names, whichever is greater."<ref name="status report"/>
*[[AGP Limits Policy]]: This ICANN policy is very similar to the temporary solution it replaced EXCEPT that the charge for each deletion over the 10 percent mark or 50 domain name limit per month was greater: "$6.75 (i.e., the cost of a current .ORG domain) or higher depending on the domain registration fee charged by the registry to the registrar."<ref name="status report"/>
**According to ICANN, these fees on domain tasting have virtually put an end to the practice as indicated by a "99.7% decrease in AGP deletes from June 2008 to April 2009." <ref name="status report"/>

==Legislation==
There is currently no U.S. legislation that addresses domain tasting.

==DNS Award==

Awardees do not participate in practices that abuse ICANN's AGP at the expense of other Internet users and work to prevent such abuses.

==Additional Resources==
*Read the [http://www.gnso.icann.org/drafts/gnso-domain-tasting-adhoc-outcomes-report-final.pdf October 2007 GNSO Outcomes Report]
*View the [http://www.icann.org/en/resources/registries/agp/agp-policy-17dec08-en.htm APG Limits Policy]
*See [http://www.icann.org/en/resources/registries/agp/agp-status-report-12aug09-en.htm Graphs of Deletion Figures Pre and Post-Policy Change]

==Related Articles==
*[[Domain Kiting]]

==References==
<references/>

[[Category: Bad Practice]]
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