Hi, I can't figure out why I should get excited about this. As a general public, small business person, who has been forced to get involved in this "digital terrorism" masquerading as domain name policy over something called the .au domain space, I find it difficult to remain relatively positive and constructive. The whole process seems counter intuitive. My view is that the ACCC should actually formally investigate the possible anti-competitive nature of the auDA concept of the .au domain space. In my view, and I could be wrong, there is some sort of anti-competitive monopoly given to auDA by someone over a public facility that happens to end in an address .au. As au is the offical abbreviation for Australia, then obviously there must be some significance in the period. Neither Australia Post, nor any other courier type company, has a general monopoly over the carriage of correspondence to a person or business whose address happens to end in Australia or the official abbreviation au (I have actually had post mail sent with au as the country and it arrived without a hitch). If anyone wanted to set up a company to deliver mail (including their own mail box system), I don't believe they have to get a license that entitles them to deliver articles to an Australian (au) address. So, why should anyone have to get permission to set up a mail service to send mail to an electronic address that ends in .au? Why can't we have a system whereby anyone who wants to set up a mail service can, and we use a simple address format exactly like we have now for a letter, or a telegram in the olden days. For example, say I wanted to set up a mail service that offered a specific service, why can't I set up a router address (e.g. lpl.au) and my customers would simply have an address xxx§lpl.au and I would redriect the mail after providing the value adding service. Or, maybe xxx§usmail, or even xxx§apo.au (for Australia Post). As this would be a business enterprise it is linked to existing ASIC records and rules. By extension, a domain name in one of the public routers (e.g. .com) a company would link this to its company name, again within the ASIC framework. All fees, etc are just caught up in the annual fee to ASIC. In this process, the need for auDA disappears and all of the jostling of how to make a buck out of small companies like me go away. Never have I seen anyone actually ask what us poor pleb customers might actually want out of a system. I see lots of stuff about what some fairly narrow interested folks have done and still want to do and lots of emotion over minutia. Generally, I believe the expectations are quite simple. Mail can actually be addressed to your company and not some name that is at the whim (without justification) of some inane and self-interested policy that has not necessarily been implemented with rigour. Under this approach people could actually use a structured ordinary address such as adrian.stephan§pob.5068.3149.au and it would arrive. Why can't this be done? Is it because auDA has not worked out how to charge for it? Or, is it actually anti-competitive that, say, Australia Post because they have the post office box system cannot do this because of some rules within auDA or the legislation. The same logic applies to Document Exchange. This could be xxx.yyy§nnnnn.dx.au. Imagine the uproar the Government would have if Australia Post decided not to deliver mail to addresses, people or organisations because it didn't like the words even though the name was lawfully approved and/or of good social status. In fact, it seems to me that Australia Post offers an agile delivery address protocol that the auDA process will never attain. If Australia Post was allowed to use its agile delivery protocols in the electronic au address, auDA would be wiped out. It is a matter of culture, and quite frankly, based on experience the internet folks are trying to impose a circa 1500 word culture. The culture is dysfunctional for what is needed in the market place. I would actually like to use a mail router identifier that clearly identified I was dealing with a provider that had processes that would deal with mail that did not meet pre-defined criteria (e.g. xxxx, virus, spam, etc)and protected the integrity that I try to stand for, as hard as it is. These processes are about but they seem to be disjointed, asynchronous and do not provide the one stop shop for integrity protection that I am looking for. That is, I am prepared to pay for a service that "gatekeeps" my electronic mail. I am not interested in some complex process, I want it very simple. I want to set filters that unless the mail is bona fide and addressed xxx.yyy§lpl.au it doesn't get delivered to me. Is this available but has not been promulgated to us mere mortals! The most important feature I am looking for is a process that protects the identity of the entity. The current process does not do that, in fact it is actually going to put my company name up for auction. How can I protect the integrity of my company identity when the digital terrorists don't give a stuff about anyone else's identity except how they jostle to screw a few bucks out of me each year. How can this system actually comply with the OECD requirements for idnetity protection when auDA policy is openly chucking out the idea of being able to use your exact company name as a domain name? I want to know who I am dealing with by company name and I want people to find me by company name. Maybe, the OECD should come and audit the policy as well. I am prepared to pay more for a better service. I don't want some el cheapo deal that means I have to deal with a lot of unwanted mail or denies me the expectation to use my company name as a domain name. I shouldn't have to beg like a mongrel dog for my company name as my domain name, nor should I have to bid for something that others have not had to do so. No one has ever been able to explain to me when I cannot use my company name to identify my company, in fact most laws requires anyone to do so. So, what makes the internet so special that it can deny what is logical to everyone else except the "chosen ones"? The whole process needs to reinvent itself or it will self-destruct with the current recursive "group think". I still can't get excited about the approval as suggested, because I think the current process is inherently anti-competitive. Could be wrong though and maybe I don't understand something fundamental. Rgds Adrian =========================================== Adrian Stephan (Managing Director) Logistics Pty Ltd POB 5068 PINEWOOD VIC 3149 Ph: +61 (0)3 9888 2366 Fx: +61 (0)3 9888 2377 akstephan§ozemail.com.au adrian.stephan§logistic.com.au www.logistic.com.au =========================================== -----Original Message----- From: David G Thompson [mailto:davidgthompson§yahoo.com] Sent: Thursday, 13 December 2001 16:16 PM To: au DNS List Subject: [DNS] The Pending Introduction of .au DN Competiton Hi all, I'm rather surprised that one or more of this list's subscribers hasn't found the time to send a bouquet (as opposed to the more common brickbats) to the list congratulating auDA and more specifically auDA hardworking Executive congratulating them on the announcement of the contract on foot with RegistrarsAsia Australian subsidiary. If the number of e-mails to this list in the past few years bemoaning the monopoly status of .com.au (not to mention .net.au, org.au et al) were printed out and lined up, they would stretch from Queen St Melbourne to Faraday St Carlton and most probably head up St Georges Road for some considerable distance. Conpicious in their silence are the holder(s) of the IP associated with Goodmedia <smiles>. BTW I have no shares in Goonmedia. List members might want to spend a small amount of time considering how much sweat and toil has gone into making this happen. I am happy to pipe up and state the bleedingly obvious. Congratulations auDA and particularly Chris Disspain and Jo Lim. This is a great .au DNS occaison. Australian DN holders will no doubt reap the benefits of this decision in the years henceforth. From the MV Ca Hottub DGT __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Check out Yahoo! Shopping and Yahoo! Auctions for all of your unique holiday gifts! Buy at http://shopping.yahoo.com or bid at http://auctions.yahoo.com --------------------------------------------------------------------------- List policy, unsubscribing and archives => http://www.auda.org.au/list/dns/ Please do not retransmit articles on this list without permission of the author, further information at the above URL. (331 subscribers.)Received on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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