Create your Benton.org account today. Registration is quick and easy. Creating an account gives you access to special features, click to learn more.
A Wave of the Watch List, and Speech Disappears
Last updated: March 4, 2008 - 11:22am
A WAVE OF THE WATCH LIST, AND SPEECH DISAPPEARS
[SOURCE: New York Times, AUTHOR: Adam Liptak]
Steve Marshall is an English travel agent. He lives in Spain, and he sells trips to Europeans who want to go to sunny places, including Cuba. In October, about 80 of his Web sites stopped working, thanks to the United States government. It turned out, though, that Mr. Marshall’s Web sites had been put on a Treasury Department blacklist and, as a consequence, his American domain name registrar, eNom Inc., had disabled them. Mr. Marshall said eNom told him it did so after a call from the Treasury Department; the company, based in Bellevue, Wash., says it learned that the sites were on the blacklist through a blog. Either way, there is no dispute that eNom shut down Mr. Marshall’s sites without notifying him and has refused to release the domain names to him. In effect, Mr. Marshall said, eNom has taken his property and interfered with his business. He has slowly rebuilt his Web business over the last several months, and now many of the same sites operate with the suffix .net rather than .com, through a European registrar. His servers, he said, have been in the Bahamas all along.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/04/us/04bar.html
(requires registration)

