Roland Turner wrote: > > Simon Hackett wrote: > > > >>As I said before, my main problem with your proposal is the inconsistency > > >>of having two commercial domains which do essentially the same thing. If I > > >>want to find Microsoft Australia, it seems logical to look at > > >>www.microsoft.com.au. To have to check www.microsoft.biz.au seems rather > > >>redundant and would probably mean most companies would go for both. > > > > No, you read their URL on their products, or on their TV adverts, or on > > Not true. I frequently locate organisations by guessing a URL. VERY > FREQUENTLY. This practice is so widespread that organisations choosing > unconventional URLs for their homepage find themselves registering the > conventional structure as well. (home.netscape.com springs to mind.) > Herein lies the problem - at the moment, guessing oftentimes works, however I believe Simon is taking the longer term view that as a *very* restricted namespace as represented by any single DNS hierarchy becomes ever more populated with ever less meaningful entries, the usefulness of a guess tends towards zero. This is indeed what is happening already in .com especially. > There appears to be an inconsistency in what you are arguing. On the one > hand you are suggesting that what your domain is called is of no > importance at all, whilst on the other, registry services require some > demonstration of your entitlement to the name that you are registering. > If indeed the name is of no importance, then why require any proof of > anything. Why not allow me to register ibm.biz.au without any > demonstration of my "right" to use that name. > Exactly - the desire has always been to somehow "impose order" (I use the term advisedly) on DNS requests. I believe you are right in ascerting that this is self-defeating. > I don't yet see the middleground. (One component of your URL is > significant, but the rest is not?) So it seems that you can argue (a) > that the name is important and therefore that the 2LD IS important or > (b) that the name is not important, in which case you should allow > anyone to register anything, or perhaps you should simply require the > use of names like 123-456-789.acn.au. > Simon and I have proposed exactly this in the past. It seems to me very beneficial to offer a completely different set of parameters for the allocation of DNS entries in this way, as it will provide if nothing else a different view of the problem. > In human affairs, naming IS important: the name of an infant, a street, > a nation, a project, a brand of peanut butter, whatever. I believe that > making an attempt to keep the naming sensible is worthwhile. I > acknowledge that a (tiny) proportion of commercial organisations in > Australia have names in wierdo domains, but the vast majority have > chosen to use com.au, even despite the long delays that held up requests > when Mr. Elz was running the com.au registry on a volunteer basis. > Well - lots of companies have used .net.au, as well as on.net, etc. - I would prefer to think of them as simply seeking viable alternatives. Again - any single DNS hierarchy based on words will lead directly to collisions, hence the problems as everyone has described. > > funding the overheads required to support your database entry. Just be > > careful about confusing database entries with rights to a name outside of > > the Internet world. > > It is a mistake to pretend that these things are indpendent. The very > fact that registries require some attempt to demonstrate your right to > use a name before allowing registration demonstrates this. > I think you were correct above - the registries *shouldn't* attempt to do anything other than provide a listing service. > Anyway, there is another point. If the names themsevles are not > important, if it is not worthwhile to try to get to the point where > competing entities can maintain the one address space, why then bother > with joint/multiple administration of the biz.au namespace? Why not > create biz.au and bozo.au and administer them seperately? If the move > towards joint administration of a namespace is worth anything, why not > do it with the widely accepted domain for registering commercial > entities in Australia. > > Simon, there's a lot in this post. To avoid the creation of a flame, I > suggest that the one useful response that you can make to this posting > is to explain why it is that you think that the third from the right > component of a name is important whilst the rest are not, or if you do > not think this, what you do think about the policy of most registries of > requiring an applicant to demonstrate a right to use a name in the real > world before registration. > All Simon is advocating is something other than a single space - content independent. HughReceived on Thu Dec 05 1996 - 18:12:01 UTC
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