Four more deadbeat registrars face firing squad
ICANN has initiated public compliances proceedings against four unrelated registrars that haven’t paid their fees in a year or more.
US-based Domus, Finland-based Globis, Hong Kong-based Overcasts, and Wanyuhulian Technology from China have all been given until May 27 to cough up or have their accreditation agreements terminated.
None of the registrars currently have any gTLD domains under management. Two of them appear to have never sold a single domain, while Globis and Domus both lost their four-figure DUM almost a year ago.
Wanyuhulian is a particularly interesting case, highlighting some ICANN weirdness.
It was first approved for its Registrar Accreditation Agreement in 2020 and had it renewed in June 2025, but according to ICANN’s breach notice, it was already at least nine months past due with its payments at the time of the renewal.
Not only that, but the notice also claims that Wanyuhulian hadn’t provided the necessary paperwork, known as the Registrar Information Specification, that sets out a registrar’s address, officers and owners:
As part of the RAA renewal process, ICANN requires updated information and documentation from registrars, through which ICANN may verify, for example, current contact information and that the registrar remains established and in good standing.
During the renewal process for Wanyuhulian Technology’s RAA in 2025, the Registrar failed to provide the information requested. To date, ICANN has not received the requested information.
So it appears that ICANN was happy to renew the accreditation of a registrar despite knowing that it was past due with its fees and not knowing for sure who was running it, who owned it, or where it was located.
Bit worrying?
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