At 22:06 29/07/97 +1000, Andrew Donald wrote: >An Australian TLD is not equal to a global TLD. Obviously, from a >competitive perspective, it is in Melbourne IT's interest to set the >barriers to entry as high as possible. The IAHC/CORE criteria are >obviously not a done deal yet and may well be modified as the current >chaotic state of affairs at a global level is resolved. I suggest we leave >the requirements as set out by Kevin Dinn below. Minimum bureaucracy and >maximum competition get my vote. > Two points: (1) The minimum requirements of a commercial DNA, in terms of providing help-desk support, processing of payments and accounting, registration itself and dealing with regulatory/legal issues, require a minimum staffing resource (well above one full-time staff member) that is virtually traffic-independent. It is quite reasonable of ADNA to demand that applicant DNAs should demonstrate the financial capability to resource these essential functions. The Internet industry is already in some disrepute with the general business community for poor performance by many under-capitalised ISPs, and it will get into further disrepute if the DNS also delivers poor performance through being under-resourced. (2) My impression is that the IAHC/CORE criteria are now stable - perhaps Geoff Huston could comment on tnis. The IAHC/CORE financial criterion of demonstrating that you can draw upon the equivalent of A$400K credit is not an excessive barrier to entry for any serious business embarking upon a commercial DNA role. I see no reason why Australian standards should be set any weaker than the gTLD standards on this point. Regards PGReceived on Wed Jul 30 1997 - 10:15:40 UTC
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