By David McGuire
washingtonpost.com Staff Writer
Monday, February 9, 2004; 2:03 PM
A company that plays a key role in managing the Internet's domain system is considering whether to restart a controversial search service that makes money off Web users' typos, a move that threatens to reignite a debate over who controls key segments of the Internet.
Stratton Sclavos, chief executive of VeriSign Inc., told investors in a conference call last month that the company might relaunch its "Site Finder" service as early as April.
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Many of the technology experts, companies and nonprofit groups that oversee the Internet's infrastructure complained that Site Finder caused Internet services to malfunction, including filters that block spam e-mail and Internet browsers designed for non-English speakers.
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That would happen again if VeriSign relaunches Site Finder, said Paul Vixie, president of the Redwood City, Calif.-based Internet Systems Consortium, a nonprofit group that develops the software used by most of the world's Internet servers.
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http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A25819-2004Feb9.html:wtf: