Below are some of the relevant bits from a report on last week's Singapore AP-IFWP and associated meetings of ccTLD bodies, for anyone interested in how it went. My thanks to Connect for paying for me to go the conference - it was a fantastic experience and has really opened my eyes to some of the Asia-Pacific region Internet issues. Kate Lance Report on Asia-Pacific International Forum on the White Paper, Singapore, 11-13 August 1998 The Meetings (a) Asia-Pacific Country-Code Top-Level Domains, 11 August (b) World-Wide Alliance of Top-Level Domains, 11 August (c) Asia-Pacific International Forum on the White Paper, 11-13 August (a) Asia-Pacific Country-Code Top-Level Domains, 11 August The ccTLDs have until recently operated individually, but have this year started to build regional representative bodies. In Europe, RIPE ccTLDs set up CENTR, and now the Asian-Pacific ccTLDs are becoming organised in order to provide: support to new regional registries, dispute resolution, policy advice, an information forum, and liason with other relevant organisations. Further information may be found at: http://www.apng.org/apcctld/. The Terms of Reference and organisational matters were discussed. Full voting-right members will be the ccTLD representatives, one per country-code domain. Registries and other interest groups may become non-voting associate members. The group decided to call the organisation APTLD, Asia-Pacific Top-Level Domains, because the generic TLDs may also wish to join at some later stage. The mood of the 3-hour meeting was positive. The Asia-Pacific region had ccTLDs in countries that range from very wealthy to extremely poor. Assisting developing countries with their Internet issues was seen as a high priority for the organisation. One extraordinary and moving moment arose in a later session when Noel Mobiha, the DNS administrator for Papua-New Guinea, described how the first news of the tsunami disaster was sent out in email by a local Catholic priest. This highlights how important Internet services can be, especially for the undeveloped countries. Incidently, PNG has connectivity to the Internet only through a 2Mbps link to Melbourne University, courtesy of Robert Elz. (b) World-Wide Alliance of Top-Level Domains, 11 August This was the meeting to start bringing together the members of the regional ccTLDs into a global body, for the reasons listed above for regional ccTLDs, and also at the moment in order to have input and representation on the new IANA. Further information may be found at: http://www.canarie.ca/tld/. The WWTLD group had released a Position Paper on the new IANA a week before that was fairly controversial, in which they made a claim to actually become the proposed IANA Names Council, rather than just be represented on it along with the many other interested bodies. After discussion they sensibly backed away from this approach. It was pointed out that a need to formalise (i.e. set up contracts) between the new IANA and existing and future ccTLDs is an important issue. They will be working on future direction via their mailing-lists. (c) Asia-Pacific International Forum on the White Paper, 11-13 August This conference covered much ground, some of it recapping of the previous two meetings and some seeking consensus on models for the new IANA. Dr Jon Postel, head of the current IANA, has proposed a set of by-laws for the new body, which must be ready to start operating by October this year with an interim Board. Further information may be found at: http://www.iana.org/newiana.html and http://www.ifwp.org/. NSI state publically that they support the changeover and will cooperate with the transfer of their lucrative monopoly into a competitive system. Privately they appear, not surprisingly, to be doing everything they can to create confusion and delay the formation of the new IANA. They appear to have formed an alliance with a group called the Root Server Confederation, who have been trying for some years to set up an "alternative root server system" so that they can gain entry to NSI's market. The most extraordinary thing about the alliance between NSI and RSC is that for four days in July 1997, the RSC's ex-leader, Eugene Kashpureff, diverted access from NSI's InterNIC (which does the actual name registrations) to his own site called AlterNIC, in order to "protest" NSI's ownership of gTLD administration. He was arrested by the FBI and pleaded guilty to wire fraud earlier this year. For NSI to now be actively working with RSC, who hacked the code used world-wide for essential DNS activity, publically humiliated the company and prevented their commercial activity for four days, is very odd. The most obvious explanation is that they hope to profit from the confusion the RSC group generate. The problem facing the Forum is that the White Paper proposes that a new body be in existence to take over responsibility for the gTLD system by the start of October. The four meetings are supposed to gather world-wide opinion on the structure of the body. During the 2.5 days of the Singapore Forum a number of workshops and discussions took place. By the end of the meeting, various models for the Board and the Councils (for Names, Addresses and Protocols) seemed to be reasonably in accordance, and also in accordance with Jon Postel's proposed By-Laws for the new IANA. It was remarked a number of times how civilised and polite this meeting was compared to the two previous ones, in Reston and Geneva. This was largely due to the diplomatic moderation of members of the Asian organising committee. Most people felt that they had learned from meeting such a wide variety of people who are deeply involved in the Internet (over 130 attendees from 32 different countries). A better understanding of regional issues also arose from the meeting - for instance the proposed By-Laws would prevent appointees of governments from sitting on the Board, but in many regions of the world the government or its appointee actually runs the ccTLD, and should not be excluded on this basis. Overall, a level of consensus appears to be growing, and hopefully this will continue in the final meeting, next week in Buenos Aires. There is a quietly optimistic sense that the task may be achieved in time, particularly after the success of this Forum, so long as the attempts by NSI to delay the process do not succeed.Received on Tue Aug 18 1998 - 20:48:22 UTC
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