I wonder if it should become a requirement of *ALL* 2LD to accept in principle provision of emergency fallback services in the event of any other 2LD becoming disfunctional because of the owning/leasing/adminstering bodies failing in some major way. I like the aspect of biz.au including a 2-partner model where each agrees to take over the other parties load should there be a single-point failure. The "vulgar" rule is going to run into the same problems the Lord High Chancellor does in trying to define what will "corrupt the average man in the street". Mightn't it be better to try to define a rule that 2LD can exclude domains percieved to be "against the public interest" with some kind of external arbitration process? That would permit exclusion of claims on generics or other words (iso 2 and 3 letter countrycodes?) likely to cause confusion. Frankly, I doubt there is a body outside of the courts which would want to have a *bar* of it without some kind of legislated indemnity. Neither of the proposers are on the eastern seaboard. I don't see that as a problem in itself, but it might be sensible to ensure there was a well connected secondary for the domain outside of SA/WA. Does that have to be reflected in a policy statement for domains? I doubt it, although its similar to requiring a DNA to be connected to more than one ISP or backbone-class provider. Don't you run the same risk com.au does in promoting state level business registration to "peer" with national/ASX forms in causing namespace collision? -George -- George Michaelson | connect.com.au pty/ltd Email: ggm§connect.com.au | c/o AAPT, Phone: +61 7 3834 9976 | level 8, the Riverside Centre, Fax: +61 7 3834 9908 | 123 Eagle St, Brisbane QLD 4000Received on Tue Dec 03 1996 - 18:40:39 UTC
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