At 02:23 PM 27/06/97 +0800, Michael Malone wrote: >ADNA has .AU as its "space". This doesn't >mean it owns .AU, or even that it will one day own it. It >just means that it is limited to operations within .AU. According to statements, formal and informal, made by those driving ADNA, it is currently ADNA's intention to be the top level policy and oversight body for the .AU namespace, as well as the policy and oversight body for .COM.AU and (lately) .NET.AU. >A public statement that ADNA should publicly commit to only >ever operating in COM.AU is ridiculous and shortsighted. If ADNA would simply acknowledge the structural flaws that now cripple any claim it may have over .AU, and commit to working with ALL interested parties, openly and in a spirit of goodwill, towards an acceptable and representative top-level body, you would find the Internet Society of Australia backing you all the way. Unfortunately, ADNA does not appear to see any problems with itself. ADNA seems to believe that it is representative of the Australian Internet community; seems to believe that it's commercial focus is appropriate for the entire .AU namespace; sees no problem with having only the vaguest of charters for public input; and sees the lack of support from CSIRO, the AVCC and the Internet Society (not to mention several DNS delegates) as a temporary difficulty. When major flaws in your claim to representativeness are pointed out, when major flaws in your claim to appropriateness are pointed out, and when major flaws in your capacity for change are pointed out, you deny that they are problems, accuse your correspondents of leaving it too late, accuse people of ulterior motives, or say "join us and work from the inside"! You have yet to substantively address the *actual problems*. When our choice to work from the OUTSIDE was taken, because we could not in all conscience risk being seen to support ADNA in its current form, we were treated as traitors! In public statements from ADNA since, there has been a clear attempt to marginalise criticism rather than embrace it. Since ADNA incorporated, and for some time before that, we have been saying the same old things: - ADNA is commercially focussed; this focus is not appropriate for a top-level policy and oversight body - ADNA is not representative of the wider Australian Internet community and is structurally incapable of becoming so - ADNA does not have the general support of the Australian Internet community and should not lay claim to .AU until it does. Don't shoot the messenger, ADNA! ADNA may yet evolve to be appropriate for .AU, though big changes will be needed. Right now it is NOT appropriate. Why not acknowledge that and work *together* with your detractors to change things? Regards, K. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Karl Auer: kauer§pcug.org.au +61-6-2494627 (bh) http://www.pcug.org.au/~kauer/ +61-6-2486607 (ah) Join the Internet Society of Australia! http://www.isoc-au.org.auReceived on Fri Jun 27 1997 - 20:14:29 UTC
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