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I used the whois Linux command to look up information for mit.edu:

$ whois mit.edu 
This Registry database contains ONLY .EDU domains.
The data in the EDUCAUSE Whois database is provided
by EDUCAUSE for information purposes in order to
assist in the process of obtaining information about
or related to .edu domain registration records.

The EDUCAUSE Whois database is authoritative for the .EDU domain.

A Web interface for the .EDU EDUCAUSE Whois Server is available at: http://whois.educause.edu

By submitting a Whois query, you agree that this information will not be used to allow, enable, or otherwise support the transmission of unsolicited commercial advertising or solicitations via e-mail. The use of electronic processes to harvest information from this server is generally prohibited except as reasonably necessary to register or modify .edu domain names.


Domain Name: MIT.EDU

Registrant: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 77 Massachusetts Ave Cambridge, MA 02139 USA

Administrative Contact: Mark Silis Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT Room W92-167, 77 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, MA 02139-4307 USA +1.6173245900 mark@mit.edu

Technical Contact: MIT Network Operations Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT Room W92-167, 77 Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge, MA 02139-4307 USA +1.6172538400 noc@mit.edu

Name Servers: EUR5.AKAM.NET USW2.AKAM.NET ASIA1.AKAM.NET USE5.AKAM.NET USE2.AKAM.NET ASIA2.AKAM.NET NS1-173.AKAM.NET NS1-37.AKAM.NET

Domain record activated: 23-May-1985 Domain record last updated: 08-Jun-2021 Domain expires: 31-Jul-2024

If this had been the first WHOIS request I had submitted on a .edu domain, I would not have had a chance to read the terms of service. Would these ToS be binding on my first request? Of course, they are binding for later requests, because I have [had a chance to] read them.

Someone
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2 Answers2

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No

One of the fundamental requirements for an enforcable contract is that there must be agreement - you cannot agree to something you can't know. You can agree to something you don't know if you were given the opportunity to find out and didn't.

However, the information you receive is not part of a contract since there is no consideration flowing from you to the Registry. Therefore, it must be a gift. However, gifts cannot come with conditions subsequent; I can impose conditions that you need to satisfy before I will give you the gift but I cannot require anything of you afterwards - that would make it a contract. Note that if you doing the conditions requires me to give the gift, then that makes it a contract too, however, if I still have discretion about giving the gift even if you fulfill the conditions, it's still a gift.

For your first call to a .edu domain, you would not be bound by this condition. For all subsequent calls, you would be.

Of course, "the transmission of unsolicited commercial advertising or solicitations via e-mail" is illegal anyway.

Dale M
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-3

If you had a chance to read the terms of service before you "allow, enable, or otherwise support the transmission of unsolicited commercial advertising or solicitations via e-mail" then of course they are enforceable.

The query results are not themselves a contract, but an offer: an IF/THEN condition. i.e. "IF you choose to use this information, THEN you can use it for anything but this ___."

You are free to back out at any time without obligation. However, once you make a decision to actually use the information offered for some purpose, you have agreed to the contract and become obligated to comply with the terms of service under which it was offered.

Michael Hall
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