HomeInsightsNominet publishes update on .UK domains suspended for criminal activity over 12 months to October 2017

Nominet suspends domains following notification from the police or other law enforcement agencies that the domain is being used for criminal activity.

The criminality report shows that the number of .UK domains suspended between 1 November 2016 and 31 October 2017 has once again doubled year on year to 16,632, which represents around 0.14% of the more than 12 million .UK domains currently registered.

The number of suspensions is an increase on the 8,049 suspensions over the preceding 12-month period. Nominet is now collaborating with ten organisations and received requests from seven of these reporting agencies. The Police Intellectual Property Crime Unit (PIPCU), which processes and co-ordinates requests relating to IP infringements from nationwide sources, is the main reporting agency with over 13,500 requests (almost double year on year), followed by the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau (NFIB) and Trading Standards.

The number of requests that did not result in a suspension was 32, which is half the number for the previous year. Reasons for domains not resulting in suspension include the domain name already being suspended by the Registrar or being transferred to the IP rights holder as a result of a court order in the meantime.

The number of suspensions that were reversed was 15. A suspension is reversed if the offending behaviour has stopped and the enforcing agency has since confirmed that the suspension can be lifted.

The report also provides an update on domains suspended and blocked under Nominet’s offensive names policy, introduced in May 2014. Almost 3,500 domains were flagged for potential breach of the offensive names policy for the period, and two suspensions were made. To read Nominet’s press release in full and for a link to the report, click here.