Adam Todd wrote: > > Robert, as much as all this is totally correct and spot on and really nice, > the allocation of ccTLD's was created on a per country basis, especially > regognising that the ccTLD must conform to the ISO country codes as defined > by the ITU. > > The ITU derives these codes probably by tossing coins sometimes, but in > basis, according to the countries name as identified by that countries > Government. > Adam, I'd like to correct your misunderstanding how ISO 3166 codes are allocated and their relationship to ccTLDs. The main basis are the names of countries as listed in the UN Terminology Bulletin which derives ultimately from the UN General Assembly. UN New York then informs the ISO 3166 Maintenance Agency (MA) in Berlin. The 10 members of the MA consult with each other and then decide on codes which are then published as ISO 3166. The regular 5 members of the MA are UN Statistical Division (New York), UNCTAD/UNECE (shared vote/Geneva), IEAE (Vienna), UPU (Bern), and ITU. In addition, there are representatives from the national standards bodies of the US (ANSI), UK (BSI), Germany (DIN), SIS (Sweden) and AFNOR (FRANCE). Note that the ISO 3166 Standard is "Codes for the representation of names of countries and their *subdivisions*". In the case of "subdivisons", these are allocated at the request of the administration having sovereignty over the area. ccTLDs are allocated by IANA on the basis of the ISO 3166 alpha-2 (2 letter) code set - defined in RFC 920 (1984) and currently RFC 1591 (1994). > Now the question arises. If the majority of ccTLD's are now being > administred at their top level by their governments, either directly or in > participation with the public, does that not mean - or at least in TODAYS > chain of events, not the historic - that AU should eventually be handled by > a Trustee made up of AU Government - and at minimum AU citizens? Governments have traditionally kept their hands off of ccTLD management in the spirit of self-regulation unless there are over-riding public policy issues that must be addressed. That said, the related issues (e.g., competition policy, intellectual property issues) are obviously concerns of governments. Now the especially relevant irony here is that nothing wakes up governments quicker than somebody claiming they are responsible for managing an ISO 3166 alpha-3 (3 letter) code-based TLD. Robert -- Robert Shaw <robert.shaw§itu.int> Advisor, Global Information Infrastructure International Telecommunication Union <http://www.itu.int> Place des Nations, 1211 Geneva, SwitzerlandReceived on Wed May 27 1998 - 01:43:35 UTC
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