Thanks! That notice is a far cry from the "within 48 hours of the revocation" as suggested in the article. It's actually two months grace period with normal domain availability, followed by ten months of suspension (domain will be removed from the published zone, but not available for reuse).
The most important wording is this, I think (save for the flag day, the text is the same in both scenarios):
From $flagday, EURid will NOT allow the registration of any new domain name where the registrant country code is either GB/GI.
On $flagday, EURid will again notify by email both GB/GI registrants and their registrars that their domain name(s) is not in compliance with the .eu regulatory framework. Registrants will be given the possibility to demonstrate their compliance with the .eu regulatory framework by updating their contact data [..] During this two-month period, the domain names in question will remain active.
As of ${flagday +2months}, all registrants who did not demonstrate their eligibility will be deemed ineligible and their domain names will be WITHDRAWN. A WITHDRAWN domain name no longer functions, as the domain name is removed from the zone file and can no longer support any active services (such as websites or email).
Twelve months after the UK withdrawal, i.e. on ${flagday +12months}, all the affected domain names will be REVOKED, and will become AVAILABLE for general registration. Their release will occur in batches from the time they become available.
Where $flagday is either the Brexit date (29 March 2019) in case of a no-deal, or the end of the transition period (1 January 2021) in case a withdrawal agreement is in place.
tremon|7 years ago
The most important wording is this, I think (save for the flag day, the text is the same in both scenarios):
From $flagday, EURid will NOT allow the registration of any new domain name where the registrant country code is either GB/GI.
On $flagday, EURid will again notify by email both GB/GI registrants and their registrars that their domain name(s) is not in compliance with the .eu regulatory framework. Registrants will be given the possibility to demonstrate their compliance with the .eu regulatory framework by updating their contact data [..] During this two-month period, the domain names in question will remain active.
As of ${flagday +2months}, all registrants who did not demonstrate their eligibility will be deemed ineligible and their domain names will be WITHDRAWN. A WITHDRAWN domain name no longer functions, as the domain name is removed from the zone file and can no longer support any active services (such as websites or email).
Twelve months after the UK withdrawal, i.e. on ${flagday +12months}, all the affected domain names will be REVOKED, and will become AVAILABLE for general registration. Their release will occur in batches from the time they become available.
Where $flagday is either the Brexit date (29 March 2019) in case of a no-deal, or the end of the transition period (1 January 2021) in case a withdrawal agreement is in place.
yorwba|7 years ago
https://eurid.eu/en/register-a-eu-domain/brexit-notice/
KineticLensman|7 years ago
Try https://eurid.eu/en/register-a-eu-domain/brexit-notice/
to avoid a 404