David raised a very interesting point about the linkage of authority and Domain names in the minds of the consumer. Perhaps this is another case of the domain name system being seen as the general answer to a number of important functional requirements. A jack of all trades approach if you will. The current domain name system does not secure a companies identity on the net. It helps but it does not secure it. However SSL certificates from legitimate CA's / RA's do: http://www.VeriSign.com/ - http://www.eSign.com.au/ http://www.thawte.com/ http://www.baltimore.com/ SSL certificates are a perfectly good way of identifying an identity on the net. Customers know it and I for one don't put my financial details on any site without a good SSL connection. (If the site (not the domain as such) looks a little suspect I will also check the certificate.) There are always ways around systems that are not designed to fulfill a certain function. i know a very good one around .com.au for instance. (Ps Gatekeeper and Identrus will certainly raise this issue in the coming months.) **** Davids other point about the failure of ecommerce in Australia is pertinent. E-commerce has really failed to take off in Australia because we have had too many regulations and other dependencies. My experience has found these four points to be the primary reasons for the woeful e-commerce status of this country. 1/ It is hard and expensive to get a domain name 2/ Telstra has sat on access rates and now broadband 3/ The federal government has played politics to the disadvantage of the IT sector 4/ Plus I would have to say the big banks have really sat on innovation and early adaptation of payment gateways. 5 Plus the business culture is also a little risk adverse. >"Every body uses search engines" >Search engines have no means of advising the user on the authority of a >particular site to represent an organisation. >DNS has that potential if we look after our DNS space. DNS is not a >directory service but it is as good as we have at the moment. >Australia has the opportunity to avoid the mistakes of the US and maintain >the usefulness (and commercial value) of DNS. Linking the DNS to an open >directory regime will greatly add value to DNS and improve end users ability >to find what they are after. This is probably one of the reason e-commerce >fails to take off.Received on Wed Feb 21 2001 - 09:16:36 UTC
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