IS-JOURNAL.ORG - Whois Information
I/S: A Journal of Law and Policy for the Information Society
I/S: A Journal of Law and Policy for the Information Society is an interdisciplinary journal of research and commentary concentrating on the intersection of law, policy, and information technology. I/S represents a one-of-a-kind partnership between one of America's leading law schools, the Moritz College of Law at the Ohio State University, and the nation's foremost public policy school focused on information technology, Carnegie Mellon University's H.J. Heinz III School of Public Policy and Management. I/S features: Research-based articles, typically solicited from leading academics and research-oriented practitioners, addressing a common theme, such as cybersecurity or privacy policy, electronic commerce, electronic government, telecommunications policy, or IT and economic and social development; A section of commentaries, typically shorter and in a less formal style, addressing cutting-edge policy topics related to IT and society; Book reviews; and Student research papers. I/S publishes two-three issues per year, both in hard-copy and subscription-based online versions. Because cybersecurity and privacy are such critical topics, and the outlets for published research on these subjects so few, I/S commits one issue each year to each of them. Papers for cybersecurity policy issues may be presented at cybersecurity policy conferences, the staging of which will be the primary responsibility of InSITeS. Papers for the privacy issue will be presented at an annual privacy symposium, to be organized by the Center for Interdisciplinary Law and Policy Studies and offered under joint sponsorship with the International Association of Privacy Professionals.
Is-journal.org
To improve performance of WHOIS service and to prevent its excessive high-volume use by a single source, we implemented a randomly generated Access Code that must be entered before running a WHOIS request.
The Access Code in the box is provided in graphics format. It has letters which are generated randomly and the symbol images are distorted. The distorted symbols cannot be read by computer programs which are used for mass-collect email addresses and any customer information. Only humans can read the distorted symbols and pass the access code.
The Access Code improves performance of our services. It prevents excessive high-volume use by a single source.
The services that require Access Codes are:
Whois – after entering the correct Access Code you can run 10 WHOIS requests before you will be prompted to enter a new Access Code.
Site Info – you can run 25 Site Info requests before you will be prompted to enter an Access Code.
Trace Route - you can run 20 Trace Route requests before you will be prompted to enter an Access Code.
RBL Check - you can run 20 RBL Check requests before you will be prompted to enter an Access Code.
What’s my IP - Access Code is not required for this service.
NOTE: We may modify Access Code policy at any time without notice on this web page.