I don't see what you mean by key servers for only true names. How do you know that a true name isn't just a false identity created with a real account on some system? How do you differentiate a true name from a unix account?
The whole concept of a true name is a fantasy. A persons name is neither unique nor unchanging. My passport reads "Brad Huntting", but if tomorrow I decide I want to be called "@*!" (pronounced "crash boom bang") instead, then that's my name. Even today I go by many written names: Brad Brad Huntting Bradley E Huntting Brad E Huntting Bradley Enoch Huntting beh huntting Enoch (mabey not) That's case insensitive and doesn't include the hundreds or thousands of e-mail addresses which mean me. The point is, a name is a handle. It doesn't need to be unique or static, all it needs to do is refer to someone or something in a reasonably unambiguous way. Besides, if I understand your idea of what a "true name" is (the name your parents or your government have assigned to you), then the whole idea of having a "true names" pgp key server is outrageously bigoted, since the vast majority of people cant write their "true name" in ascii. brad