> ] At the moment there is a working group which is putting together some > ] papers about the creation (for lack of a name) a Domain Name Authority for > ] australia, which the government would rubber stamp, and which would control > ] the overall .au namespace. > > Wouldn't this muddy/confuse the derivation of authority for the DNS, if > it was seen that a local government (ie: non-global in scope) had the > authority to bless an organisation with control of a small piece of the > DNS without reference to the IANA or its delegated authority for the *.au > piece of the DNS (ie: Robert Elz). Any organisation, regardless how well meant or who is in it, will not be able to "assume" a position of an authority for .AU without the approval of Robert Elz. kre has been involved in the earlier meetings, and hopefully continues to support the development of such an organisation. I don't speak for Robert, but my guess is that this "structure" must have wide community support and input. Everyone must agree that it will do the job, and that any possibly bias or commercial interest will be minimised. It must also be capable of doing the job well for the foreseeable future. If the community is satisfied with all of this, and Robert can see that the community is satisfied, then I believe that he will be more than delighted to rid himself of the responsibility. As a closing note, I've used the word "community" several times here. This does not just mean ISPs. At the moment, ISPs happen to be the largest interest group wrt the expansion of the DNS. In the same way that Universities were the entire Australian Internet three short years, it is likely that change will occur again. The forum must attempt to satisfy the academic community, government, ISPs, current and future domain holders, and worldwide users of the net, as well as any future stake holders that we haven't (and can't) think of right now. Should be fun. MMReceived on Thu Jan 23 1997 - 12:00:25 UTC
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