I'm sure you're not going to lose any parking revenue over the weekend until the issue is resolved.
Some places still won't accept ngTLD's, but the ones that have and are good only get 1-5 visitors a month. This is most likely due to domainer investors doing a "live whois".
I also did some tests using multiple ISPs and may have stumbled upon an issue known or unknown to the experts where some Resolvers and/or ISP Nameservers are not recognizing these nTLDs at all – scary for adoption/growth…
I dont want to get into the handshake protocols, thin name severs, “root servers access”, ipV4 vs ipV6 debate etc…but something is wrong and not good here in my view…where does Google with its own ROTD launches fit into all this? What does the dominant Chrome browsers URL treatment mean to the future of nTLD, it in some cases simply converts nTLD to queries or search terms – lots of questions, I need a sanity check someone…Vin Cerf please call me
Per my parking provider Google finally has removed the "fail listing" of these domains - however they are still pending to be moved from this status in my account