On Sun, 21 Jun 1998, Jeff Williams wrote: > I suppose you are referring to me in this comment. That is fine, but you are > a bit off base with you comment, if I may say so. First of all the > InterNic's Whois facility does not just query the InterNics Database. It also > query's the 13 Legacy Root servers as well and any other Sub Domains that > are known to those 13 Legacy Root servers. That comprises about 98.5% > of all the known DN's that are registered. So I find your conclusion very > misleading or you are misunderstood my previous posts on this subject. Can you provide an example of this? > > Please remember that a > > large proportion of the Internet exists outside of the USA. Just for a > > start, it does not appear that most if not all subdomains of delegated ccTLDs > > are listed. > > This is also not a correct statement either. In fact I pointed out one such > example of one that is listed that is a subdomain to .AU, that being .com.au. > There are only 4 Routable subdomains to .au back to the 13 legacy root servers > currently. This is not to say that they are "Official" or "Authorized" crom > within > Australia, rather that the DN's registered under other subdomains/subnets to .au > are not visible globally. In that case, why does 'whois com.au' or 'whois com-au-dom' return 'no match'? All the DN's under .AU are perfectly visible globally using the DNS - they just don't appear under 'whois' (against the InterNIC DB), as distinct from AU.COM and AU.NET, which are totally different domains. > Now I would like to inject here that we currently do not see this as a right or > wrong situation per se. Rather we believe that it is due to the current Legacy > Root server DNS system that is currently what 98.5% or the IPv4 address > space Internet structure. We believe that this structure is not in the best > interest of the Internet community and I have stated such on many occasions. > Hence our support for IRSC's that seek to be included or seek to change this > structure to allow for alternative gTLD's and TLD's as well as additional > interfacing IP address spaces that can expand the existing DNS and IP address > space structure. Sorry but I fail to see what this has to do with the point I am making. > > With the lack of a widely-used whois referral mechanism, national > > and regional NICs are not tied back to the InterNIC in an automatic fashion > > (I for one would love to see this fixed). > > This is already fixed and has been for some time. You can use many different > Internet Network tools that are currently readily available for this purpose. I > have mentioned a few of them earlier on this list. Examples are SATAN/SATAN PLUS, > > Enterprise Network management system (Sun Microsystems) and Netview (IBM) are > a few. We use all of these tools and have built our own interface facility to > interface > them for better Network and Internet management. Depends on your meaning of 'fixed'. This should be fixed at the application protocol level and not require 'tack-ons' to management systems. Regards. -- Chris Chaundy (Core Engineering Manager) connect.com.au pty ltd, Level 9, 114 Albert Rd, Sth Melbourne, VIC 3205, Aust. Internet: chris§connect.com.au Phone: +61 3 9251-3671 Fax: +61 3 9251-3666Received on Sun Jun 21 1998 - 19:27:52 UTC
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