Registrants with .LY domain names, the ccTLD for Libya, must have
paused last week when the Libyan government ordered the cancellation of
VB.LY, a link shortening service run by run by Ben Metcalfe and Violet
Blue that redirects to adult content, as it was declared that the
content of the site was "against Sharia law".
"Pornography and adult material aren't allowed under Libyan law,
therefore we removed the domain," a letter from the government-owned
Libya Telecom & Technology agency said, adding: "The issue of
offensive imagery is quite subjective, as what I may deem as offensive
you might not, but I think you'll agree that a picture of a scantily
clad lady with some bottle in her hand isn't exactly what most would
consider decent or family friendly at the least," according to a report
in The Guardian.
The report goes on to say "other moves made by the ministry could
threaten the business of another web startup, bit.ly, which has had
millions of dollars of investors' money poured into it - including
funding of $10m (£6.3m) received earlier this week - following the
announcement in June by the Tripoli regulator for domain registry that
domain registrations with fewer than four characters were restricted for
use by registrars 'having presence' in Libya - that is, based in the
country - where they would be under local Sharia jurisdictions."
Existing registrants though with domain names of less than four letters are able to keep their domain names.
John Levine, a noted commentator on issues relating to the internet who
also has a .LY domain, says he is only slightly concerned he will lose
his.
"Honestly, it was pretty foolish to put a sex site on a domain in a
Muslim country. VB is Violet Blue, a very elegant high class sex site,
but there's no way it's anything else," writes Levine. "She argued that
VB.LY was only a redirector to underlying sites and had no sexual stuff
on it, which may have been technically correct, but it was utterly
obvious to anyone what showed up on your screen if you typed
http://vb.ly in the address bar. I think Violet Blue is swell, but it is
naive to imagine that the Libyan government would not feel differently
once they noticed it."
Levine also writes "Here's a thought experiment: let's say someone lives
in Denmark, where pictures of 17 year olds are considered legal
erotica, and builds his web site. He registers a domain for it in .US or
.GU or .AS or .PR or .VI or .MP, where US law considers those pictures
child pornography. How long would the domain last? Would it matter that
he didn't know, or that he couldn't read the English fine print? Same
issue."
To read the full post by John Levine on his blog, see:
weblog.johnlevine.com/ICANN/vblue.html



