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===2012 Changes===
 
===2012 Changes===
In January, 2012, ahead of its February [[ICANN 43]] meeting, the organization announced that it was considering changes to its IRTP. The GNSO council approved those changes, which entail defining a universal 5 day maximum allowable lock period for domains that have had changes made to the registrant's name in the [[Whois]] record. Domains with changes made the name of the registrant in the Whois record are locked to prevent transfer, the policy is seen as helping prevent [[Domain Hacking|domain hacking]]. The new rule is seen as largely a response to [[GoDaddy]]'s current 60 day lock policy, which has been a continued target for criticism. GoDaddy, through its representative [[James Bladel]], was involved in creating the proposed changes.<ref>[http://domainincite.com/end-in-sight-for-go-daddys-60-day-transfer-lock/ End in Sight for Go Daddys 60 Day Transfer, DomainIncite.com]</ref>
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In January, 2012, ahead of its February [[ICANN 43]] meeting, the organization announced that it was considering changes to its IRTP. The GNSO council approved those changes, which entail defining a universal 5 day maximum allowable lock period for domains that have had changes made to the registrant's name in the [[Whois]] record. Domains with changes made to the name of the registrant in the Whois record are locked to prevent transfer, the policy is seen as helping prevent [[Domain Hacking|domain hacking]]. The new rule is seen as largely a response to [[GoDaddy]]'s current 60 day lock policy, which has been a continued target for criticism. GoDaddy, through its representative [[James Bladel]], was involved in creating the proposed changes.<ref>[http://domainincite.com/end-in-sight-for-go-daddys-60-day-transfer-lock/ End in Sight for Go Daddys 60 Day Transfer, DomainIncite.com]</ref>
    
==Additional Links==
 
==Additional Links==

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