RIPE NCC Responds to ICANN CEO's Proposal
An anonymous reader sends in: "RIPE NCC (the European IP address registry) responds to the ICANN proposals for reducing their own accountability even further whilst spending millions of everyone else's money." ICANN will be meeting next week in Ghana - ought to be a feisty meeting.
It seems to me this could be a good thing, to open up the full flood gates of complaints towards ICANN. I mean seriously, I think almost every organization affiliated with them, plus many of us (cough /.) is just about fed up with them and some of the not quite brilliant things they're doing.
Let's just hope this gets something rolling, because obviously our voices are next to unheard.
We don't need no Net Explorer We don't need no Thought control
I've said it before and I'll say it again - what's stopping people running their own nameservers? Most people seem to have trouble remembering _not_ to run 'em on Linux :-)
Screw ICANN. DNS itself is a bad idea, anyway, recentralising a decentralised network...
When they refused to create the .XXX TLD they showed complete disregard for the future of the net as a self regulating entity. If they had created an .XXX TLD then we could banish net nany, cyber sitter, government intervention "to protect the children" and many other anoyances in one easy swoop.
There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
Sounds like it might be time to start gathering up some ICANN drink coolers and Ethics Manuals...
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And this is because Ghana is a world Internet power, right?
For kripe's sake, just look at their "meeting" calendar - it looks like a travel agency billboard.
What additional proof do you need that ICANN is into frittering other people's money for their own entertainment?
Finally, let us say that we are quite surprised by the way this proposal was published. The document contains proposals for change of such fundamental scope, in a field that is of utmost importance to our community, that we wish that you had discussed these with us beforehand.... Seeing that you are proposing fundamental changes to ICANN and the principles behind the ICANN - RIR MoU, signed in 1999, we believe that in the interest of our members, we have to thoroughly re-assess our relationship with ICANN.
We are looking forward to discussing these issues with you at the earliest possible opportunity.
In general, it's a good idea to let the people you're working with know things before you make them public.
ICANN can't like how the note ends... The tone makes it sound like it's buh-bye for ICANN...
FOUR acronyms in the story title. Compared to three non-acronyms. That's some kind of record, IIRC.
They're Europeans! Pee-yoo!
This is a country with 8,000 Internet users, 110 hosts, 82 domain names, 4 ISPs and a 2,048bps connection to the outside world. They don't have much going on.
So, why are they meeting in Ghana?
-Waldo Jaquith
The problem with this is that this has a western-centric point of view which does not take in to account the writing systems that foreign languages use.
Now, the ICANN was in a position to officially push forward some specification, any specification to allow international characters in domain names. Unfortunatly, they were too busy spending million of dollars on international conferences, staying in five star hotels, to actually do anything about this problem.
International domain labels work right now with current DNS servers and DNS client software. One can type in, say español.example.com in Mozilla, and MaraDNS, not to mantion DjbDNS, will correctly resolve this domain name. The trick: Mozilla uses UTF-8 to encode international characters in domain names, and both MaraDNS and DjbDNS can handle domain names with UTF-8 characters.
- Sam
The secret to enjoying Slashdot is to realize that it should not be taken too seriously.
Mod this bastard down, not up. You can find my original post here.
Maybe if we just table it for a week, things will look better
insert more RIPE jokes here
psxndc
The emacs religion: to be saved, control excess.
Am I the only one that thought of Star Trek when they saw that acronym?
*blinks* I wonder where the .dot came from... I'm sure I meant to type .god - oh well, doesn't really matter anyway - chances are there's actually a dot-dot out there as well. :) .xxx I saw mentioned in some other posts also exists in those alternative top level domains.)
(Ooh, and the
And we have no clue what we are doing, but we need your money...
IOW, "Do your damn job, and quit trying to become a bloated government agency."
Well said, indeed!
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
Yes, I know this is off topic, but geeze... it just appeared there. Or at least, the empty block with nothing in it appeared. *pats his Mozilla*
:(
Now I see what they mean by large - and it ain't good.
Oops, I should have said, of course, the Ali-Foreman fight in Zaire. The Ali-Fraiser fight I was thinking about was the "Thrilla in Manila".
p.s. learn to spell
When I read this the first thing I thought of was are they going to serve coolaid at this conference, but then I realized I was thinking of Guyana instead. Dang all of out worries might have been over. ;-)
Incredibly, your post is completely free of content.
Thank you.
somebody mod this guy up!! This is the FIRST intelligent post I've read on /. ... period..
Oh god, that woman is John Romero!
...THAT should prove an effective barrier to those pesky would-be participants that don't have barrels of corporate money behind them...
"How to Do Nothing," kids activities, back in print!
If you want domain names (and URLs) to work reliably and consistently from one location to another, there needs to be some mechanism to sort out conflicts over the meaning of a name. That job is inherently fraught with controversy, because it will pit people with vastly different interests, cultures, and expectations against one another. I don't particularly like the result of UDRP, but the bottom line is that dispute resolution is a difficult job no matter how it's done.
On the other hand if everybody picks his own root (or his own root search path) then URLs won't have the same meaning from one client to another, and instead of having ICANN handle disputes about who owns a TLD or SLD, we'll have the same disputes being handled by people trying to tell random users to change their root servers. or by interception proxies forced on users by ISPs. In some parts of the world there will be government edicts insisting that a particular root be used, with different roots required in different parts of the world.
Granted that ICANN is seriously screwed up and that its current proposal is not a step in the right direction. But having one authority responsible for dispute resolution at the TLD level makes a lot more sense than inviting wide variation in the meanings of DNS names.
RFC 2826 still says it pretty well.
See Inside risks: The homograph attack
CACM vol 45 issue 2 (Feb 2002)
http://doi.acm.org/10.1145/503124.503156
Read Epic the first RPG novel.
OTOH, Any country can create .XXX.CC (where CC is the country code) if it wants to do so.
Boy, ICANN sure knows how to spice up their driectives with power enabling terminology. for chrissakes, they're just assigning names to numbers. The entire DNS system could drop off the face of the earth, and the internet could still function.
ICANN has really agrandized their task. Kind of like the garbage man puffing himself up to the point where he wants to come into your house to inspect your trash cans.
Amazing the degree to which a commitee can twist reality if given enough time. Think of all the other commitees in government and industry, grinding away at things until what they are responsible for stops making sense.
Yes, I have a large blank box appearing also (glances at junkbuster proxy).
Isn't it odd that the failure of "regular" ads to bring in revenue leads to the creation of yet more ads, just bigger? I don't get the logic that says making the ads more objectionable (and that *must* be their position, else why offer a paid-for ad-free version?) will result in better ad returns. If they don't work when they're "regular" size, what twisted reasoning believes they will be effective when larger? Does /. explain to its advertisers that the value of space on this site is *even less* than the normal rate, since the readers are far more likely than the average net user to block ads?
When this latest effort fails (and I confidently predict it will), what are they going to do? make the ads *even bigger*? Move to full page ads or transitionals? The business model of converting eyeballs into revenue via ads *does not work*, and this has been apparent for 18 months or more. How come a supposedly net-savvy site like /. doesn't see this? I can only asssume that the parent company has forced this upon Taco. This won't be sole cause of the end of /. (at least in its current form), but it will be a significant contributory factor. I'm waiting to be proved wrong by a story that trumpets the fantastic sign-up rate that the new subscription service has brought. But I believe I'll be waiting for ever (for values of "ever" LE the day the plug gets pulled).
Which leads me to : Anyone prepared to start placing their bets on how long til the plug is pulled? My Guess - Aug 13th
In fact, tosser, you will realise that I did not write the subject! It is a reply, and the subject is intact, as all good replies should be. Have a nice troll.
i hate pansy republicans
RIPE was one of the parties pressuring ICANN because they couldn't guarantee the root servers.
Now in this response they say "The so called "volunteers" operating the rootserver system are well funded and very well co-ordinated. Binding them contractually to one entity, ICANN, would create a single point of failure, possibly subject to capture. The current form of organisation works well, and is resistant to capture through the multitude of different operators and organisations housing and operating the servers. This system has been stable for many
years. We think that to change it in the way you envision would introduce risks more important than any co-ordination benefits.
Furthermore, we feel that you would do better not to burden ICANN with the task of financing the Root Server operating system. Rather, ICANN should
stick to the core mission of coordinating them.
"
Interesting
"Science is about ego as much as it is about discovery and truth " - I said it, so sue me.
Actually, they HAD been pulling the ad straight off of www.vasoftware.com, and putting that in the junkbuster or other 'deny' proxies list fixed it, but now it's back. They must have gotten wise to that and started caching the ads at images.slashdot.org. Hmmm... on to breaking that too since I don't want to kill *ALL* the pics from slashdot.....
No shit. Do they even have telephones in fucking Ghana?
looks like every unsavory organisation of the world (WTO, IMF, WB ... and now ICANN) is discovering the unsuspected advantages of holding conferences in countries where a) nobody knows what they are talking about, and b) anybody who dares to raise their voice in dissent will be heading for some mass grave today rather than tomorrow.
I never managed to understand why people keep harping about new TLDs.
.com is that there is not hierarchy... one may assume that a domain name ends with .com and thus it is unnecessary to query for it.
While i can see the need for a directory service where one can type the same of a company and have a choice of web sites for companies with that name/service/etc. (yahoo works very well for me when i want to achieve that btw).
I apears to me that the creation of new top level TLDs is quite silly... the value today of
Creating new TLDs, assuming they would be succesful would defeat that value... one would be forced to figure out in which TLD a name resides.
Of corse since users do not care about new TLDs and assume that the Web site for foo is foo.com, new TLDs are largely a bust.
I've been hearing about new TLDs for years and years and i could simply never figure out what could the rational behind it be.
DNS is not a directory service, and would suck as one... assume there are 100 top level TLVs. You need a directory service to search them... then wouldn't it be simpler to start by building a directory service ?
As for alternative roots... that is an even sillier discussion.
Anyone can have a DNS server that claims to be root... and that will be 100% useless unless everybody else recognises it.
DNS seems to attract all sorts of insane people... which as every certified lunatic proceed to imagine their own parallel universe with alternative root servers, etc.
The DNS protocol itself is 8-bit clean, so even BIND can handle UTF-8 characters. That isn't the problem. Go read some of the drafts for a much better treatment than I could give.
But let's not start doling out domains before the solution is complete. And it's not.
No way pornographers want XXX. Why? They enjoy legal battles?
.xxx from its network. So would AOL. they do NOT want to be seen as porn advocates. Porn would suffer HEAVILY. Sure they would win their court battle, but it would be LONG and protracted and the whole world would be against them.
:D
Why? because now religious groups would leave porn sites alone and go after Comcast and AOL, etc. And you know DAMN well comcast would comply and block
They just dont need it. Well unless it came with guarantees that it would not get blocked.
Dont get me wrong, its stoopid, especially since comcast has porn channels anyway. But you know how hyped the net is. Come election time, they would get roasted
They're "reaching out", as an international, uh, thing. The host is on the hook for the vast majority of the expenses.
They are paying roughtly $13K US for first class tickets to get to Ghana for each of the board members from the US; the Yurrupeans presumably pay less.
The thing is spearheded in Ghana by Nii Quaynar who is a great guy but has been sucked in, IMO by ISOC to toe the party line. Remember Sean Dorans great screeds in the 80's: ISOC = "It seeks Overall Control" - same poeple, different I* organization.
Need Mercedes parts ?
Ask the ICANN board member who uses alternative roots and has for four years if he's had any problems.
The answer is to help the alternative root community: ORSC, OpenNIC, PacROOT, not to support ICANN over FUD like this.
Need Mercedes parts ?
...how this is either a troll or redundant--since it was modded as both. I've never posted that message before, and I was defending myself.
Go ahead and mod this one down too. How bout Offtopic?