Quoting Mr Grumpy on Friday May 17, 2002: | | Unfortunately Kim auDA always seems to be fixing | things after the fact. I think that is a fair comment. But it is not peculiar to auDA and I don't think it is all bad. That is simply because publically noticable problems are ALWAYS fixed after the fact! If it was prevented from the beginning then it is never an issue and you never hear about it. Of course you only hear about the bad things or the hiccups, and naturally these are addressed after they are identified. I can't help but think back to the leak that Net Registry was associated with. It is my understanding that went on for so long for the very reason I mentioned before.. the people that actually had the facts never told auDA except in little snippets forcing everyone to mess around guessing and not fix the problem. If there is a problem, and you are forthcoming to auDA, I'm sure it will be given the utmost attention. If it is not then please feel free to tell me as a user rep with auDA. Anything you say to be would be held in the strictest confidence if that is of a concern. | And dont tell me to become a member and join the board | because the people on it do not have my respect. You don't need to be a member of auDA or be on the board to have impact with auDA. As a self-regulatory agency it should accept input from any stakeholder that has a valid concern or problem. It's easy to get a free email account and pseudo-nym, jump on the band wagon, say auDA is a horrible administrator. auDA is not perfect, but if you are constructive then things will improve. No-one but the most ardent conspiracy theorist believes everyone involved in auDA actually approves of some of the mess that occurs in our industry. | I hope when the registry changes you wont be fixing | things after the fact like last time. That is always the aim. But if you think any organisation is going to be 100% perfect you are in for a huge let-down. No-one has 20-20 vision into the future to anticipate every problem that can occur. kimReceived on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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