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<p class="newsheading">The New Domain name Game...How domain names started</p>
<p>Governing the Internet has quite rightly been compared to the task of herding 
  cats. Internauts are a notoriously opinionated and fractious group and the process 
  is usually conducted in the full glare of public scrutiny, subject to continuous, 
  pointed and often intensely personal criticism from any interested party. Power 
  plays tend to fail, often spectacularly. As Dave Clark, speaking about the Internet 
  Engineering Task Force, observed in 1992, &quot;We reject kings, presidents, 
  and voting. We believe in rough consensus and running code.&quot; <br>
  The recent effort to increase the number of top-level domain names and to break 
  the monopoly of the registrar for the existing generic domains, .COM, .EDU, 
  .ORG and .NET, illustrates these principles--and what can happen when they are 
  ignored. </p>
<p><b>Historical Background </b></p>
<p>Once upon a time, it cost nothing to register names in the top-level Internet 
  domains. This began changing in March, 1992, when the National Science Foundation 
  decided to outsource domain name and IP network registration. NSF solicited 
  bids and, on January 1, 1993, it awarded to Network Solutions, Incorporated 
  a contract to run a registration service named the InterNIC. The contract ran 
  through September, 1998, with all costs of operation borne by U.S. taxpayers 
  through NSF. </p>
<p>By September, 1995, the situation had changed. NSI had been acquired by Science 
  Applications International Corporation, a multi-billion-dollar defense contractor. 
  And, without requesting comment from the Internet community, NSF had authorized 
  NSI to begin charging for domain name registrations in the .COM and .ORG domains 
  at the exact time when commercial use of the Internet was growing explosively. 
</p>
<p>Almost immediately after the September 13, 1995 NSI announcement, subscribers 
  to the newdom, com-priv, ietf and domain-policy mailing lists and the comp.protocols.tcp-ip.domains 
  newsgroup quickly began to focus on the need to expand the top-level domain 
  name space and on setting up new registry authorities to compete with the NSI/InterNIC 
  monopoly. </p>
<p>In April, 1996, Eugene Kashpureff, set up the so-called Alternic registry and 
  claimed the .EXP .LTD .LNX .MED .NIC and .XXX experimental domains as his intellectual 
  property. Although these additional domains were then supported only by his 
  own nameservers, (and are today supported by less than 1% of the total nameserver 
  population of the Internet, conspicuously not including the 7 &quot;root&quot; 
  nameservers which sit at the top of the DNS query tree,) Kaspureff began charging 
  to register clients in some of them. </p>
<p>Possibly in reaction to Kashpureff's Alternic service, on May 3, 1996, Jon 
  Postel, Director of the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) posted draft-postel-iana-itld-admin-00.txt. 
  It proposed that up to 50 new registries be created, each of which would have 
  the exclusive right to register new domain names in up to three new international 
  top-level domains (for a total of 150 new domains in the first year), in competition 
  with NSI and its traditional .COM, .EDU, .ORG and .NET. It also suggested up 
  to 30 additional new registries and 90 iTLDs be authorized in each of the next 
  five years. </p>
<p>Internet Drafts are the least &quot;official&quot; documents of the Internet 
  standards process. Nonetheless, a number of companies and individuals, sensing 
  an opportunity to create name registration monopolies, set up &quot;experimental&quot; 
  registries based on the Postel draft. Among these were Karl Denninger of MCSNet, 
  who asserted ownership of .BIZ and Christopher Ambler of Image Online Design, 
  who staked a similar claim to .WEB. </p>
<p>A version of Postel's original document, retitled draft-postel-iana-itld-admin-01.txt, 
  was presented at the June 24-25, 1996 annual meeting of the ISOC Board of Trustees, 
  which then passed its Resolution 96-05, authorising Postel to refine the proposal 
  to include a business plan for review and approval by the Board. Among other 
  changes, it proposed reducing the cost of IANA licensing for new registries 
  from the $100,000 in the original draft to $2,000 plus 2% of revenues. </p>
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<p><b>There were two other incidents which would have a profound effect on the 
  future course of events:</b> </p>
<p>On June 22, 1995, NSI announced a new, unilateral policy for dealing with conflicts 
  between trademark owners and holders of existing domain names. If the holder 
  of a trademark contested ownership of a domain name, NSI would now suspend the 
  registered domain name, removing it from the master Domain Name Service database 
  until the dispute was resolved in a court of law. In practice, this meant that 
  NSI took the side of the contesting party, regardless of the merits of its claim. 
  On June 26 David Graves, NSI's Internet Business Manager, clarified this policy 
  by explaining that NSI would continue to maintain the existing domain name only 
  if the name holder agreed to fully indemnify NSI and to pay all of its legal 
  expenses. The Internet community was consulted on neither the intial policy 
  nor Graves' clarification and, needless to say, Internauts' reaction was strongly 
  negative. </p>
<p>Then, on July 31, 1996, Bill Manning, an employee of IANA, met with IODesign's 
  Ambler--among others--to discuss the criteria by which organizations that wished 
  to apply to run the proposed new registries might be evaluated by the ad-hoc 
  committees the Postel draft would create to oversee the process. Manning's notes 
  of the meeting indicate that the participants felt that a &quot;good faith effort&quot; 
  to establish a working registration service was one criterion which should be 
  used. The issue of fees to be paid to IANA by the registries was also discussed. 
</p>
<p>At the end of the meeting, Ambler handed Manning a sealed envelope which apparently 
  contained a check from IODesign for $1,000.00. Ambler maintains that Manning 
  understood that the check and the accompanying paperwork constituted a formal 
  application for permission from IANA to run an experimental registry. Postel 
  and Manning strongly dispute this idea. Manning maintains that the envelope 
  was presented to him in a manila folder along with other papers from Ambler 
  and that he did not discover it until after Ambler left the meeting. Ambler 
  does not dispute Manning's contention that the envelope was returned to him, 
  unopened. </p>
<p>On August 2, Postel sent a message to the newdom mailing list stating, &quot;The 
  suggestion that the IANA is accepting money to reserve new top-level domain 
  (sic) is completely false.&quot; </p>
<p>Regardless of Postel's warning, and acting on the assumption that operation 
  of an experimental registry would lend legitimacy to their applications for 
  the real thing, Ambler, Kashpureff, Denninger and various others set up such 
  registries. Eventually, they began to charge for registrations, assuring their 
  customers that their experimental domain names would eventually be supported 
  by all Internet name servers. </p>
<p><b>Enter the IAHC </b></p>
<p>On October 22, 1996, a press release from Donald Heath, President of ISOC, 
  announced that an International Ad-Hoc Committee, composed of &quot;representatives 
  of the large international Internet community&quot; would be formed to &quot;undertake 
  defining, investigating, and resolving issues&quot; raised by the Postel draft. 
  The IAHC itself was named on November 12, 1996. It consisted of one representative 
  each from the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), the World Intellectual 
  Property Organization (WIPO), and the International Trademark Association (INTA), 
  plus two members each from ISOC, IANA, and the Internet Architecture Board (IAB) 
  (a total of nine). George Strawn co-Chair of the U. S. Federal Networking Council 
  represented the FNC. Heath, representing ISOC, chaired the Committee. </p>
<p>Under pressure from large ISPs, such as PSINet, and from powerful individuals, 
  such as Paul Vixie, (who maintains the Berkeley Internet Name Domain software 
  used by most Unix computers--including the Internet root name servers--to provide 
  DNS services), the IAHC set an aggressive schedule. It created a Web site and 
  a mailing list and began work on a Draft Specification for Administration and 
  Management of gTLDs, which was released on December 19, 1996, just over a month 
  after the IAHC's creation. </p>
<p>The Draft Specification proposed substantial changes to the Postel draft's 
  recommendations. Instead of a first-come-first-served policy, the intial group 
  of new registrars would be chosen from among the applicants by lottery. Just 
  seven intial new domains would be created, rather than the 150 the Postel draft 
  had specified. Only one master registry would be created and, instead of getting 
  exclusive rights to three new domains apiece, all the new registrars would share 
  registration authority for all new domains. A Council of Registrars (CORE) would 
  be created to oversee the &quot;necessary contractual, legal, oversight and 
  public policy framework under which CORE and the individual Registrars must 
  operate&quot; with a Board of Trustees to oversee CORE. Most controversial of 
  all, the Draft Specification mandated a 60-day waiting period from the time 
  an end-user applied for a domain name until it would become operational. </p>
<p>NSI's monopoly over the .COM name space would continue unchanged, until the 
  expiration of its contract with NSF in September, 1998 at the earliest. </p>
<p>Release of the Draft Specification created a deluge of reaction. Over the six 
  weeks of the official comment period, the iahc-discuss email list received over 
  4,000 posts. More input was submitted to the IAHC via surface mail, fax, telephone 
  calls and confidential email. Many parties offered substantive criticism, both 
  of the provisions of the Draft and of the process by which it was generated. 
  Others threatened lawsuits and predicted that implementing the Draft would &quot;break 
  the Internet&quot;. Still others, notably Aveek Datta of Monolith Internet Services, 
  Intl., were outraged that no provision was to be made to provide no-fee registrations 
  for non-profits and individuals. </p>
<p>Armed with this mass of input, the IAHC reconvened in Switzerland during the 
  last week of January, 1997 to hammer out a Final Report. It was released just 
  before midnight on February 4.</p>
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<p><b>The Final Report </b></p>
<p>The Final Report of the IAHC: Recommendations for Administration and Management 
  of gTLDs differed in major ways from the Draft Specification. </p>
<p>It made CORE a Swiss-chartered non-profit association, and replaced the Board 
  of Trustees with a Policy Oversight Committee. The POC was chartered to oversee 
  CORE, authorize additional registrars, remove registrars for cause, authorize 
  additional gTLDs and change the technical and financial entry requirements for 
  new registrars in light of evolving circumstances. It was to be made up of representatives 
  from the same organizations which made up the IAHC (and in the same numbers) 
  plus two members from CORE itself and a non-voting representative from the Depository 
  (the International Telecommunications Union) for the Memorandum of Understanding 
  which would implement the Report. It also set up a Policy Advisory Board to 
  provide input to the POC on policy matters regarding gTLDs, CORE and amendments 
  to the Memoranda of Understanding which set the governance structure for the 
  whole enterprise. </p>
<p>The Report replaced the widely-disliked mandatory 60-day waiting period with 
  a voluntary waiting period for registrants worried about trademark disputes. 
  It also required Administrative Domain Name Challenge Panels (ACPs) operating 
  under the aegis of WIPO to provide binding arbitration for those disputes. </p>
<p>It authorized an intial 28 new registrars, equally distributed among 7 geographic 
  regions. Each group of 4 regional registrars would to be chosen by lottery from 
  among the qualified applicants for that region. Regions with less than 5 qualified 
  applicants would have significantly lower bars to entry than would regions where 
  a lottery was required. In contested regions, applicants would have to possess: 
</p>
<p>$5,000,000.00 in disability and liability insurance <br>
  the equivalent of 10 full-time employees <br>
  $500,000.00 in available capital (bank loan guarantees qualified) <br>
  an existing, registered second-level domain free of DNS errors <br>
  It also required a refundable $20,000.00 application fee and a commitment to 
  pay the non-refundable cost of a detailed credit report to be conducted by an 
  outside auditing agency. And, beyond business and fiscal criteria, the Final 
  Report also demanded would-be registrars meet fairly tough technical, operational 
  and administrative standards. Those included staff with previous DNS, router, 
  SQL and Unix sysadmin experience, a 24 X 7 helpdesk and automated call distribution 
  system, multihomed or distributed Internet connectivity and &quot;robust&quot; 
  backup and disaster recovery procedures. </p>
<p>It exempted NSI from sharing .COM, .EDU, .ORG and .NET and left the question 
  of NSI's post-1998 registrar status unanwsered. It also kept the seven initial 
  gTLDs of the Draft Specification and defined them to be: </p>
<p><br>
  <b> .ARTS</b> for cultural and entertainment entities<br>
  <b>.FIRM</b> for businesses, or firms<br>
  <b>.INFO</b> for information services<br>
  <b>.NOM</b> for those wishing personal nomenclature<br>
  <b>.REC</b> for recreation and entertainment entities<br>
  <b>.STORE</b> for businesses offering goods to purchase<br>
  <b>.WEB</b> for entities related to the WWW</p>
<p><br>
  <b>Fallout </b></p>
<p>The Final Report was hotly criticized by the alternative registries community. 
  Despite the promise that more registrars would be authorized once the inevitable 
  start-up problems were addressed, many of the operators of experimental registries 
  were outraged that their efforts would not be rewarded with automatic status 
  as new registrars. Some took issue with the mandatory binding arbitration requirement, 
  with the choice of intial gTLDs, with the high barriers to entry for the intial 
  applicants and with a host of fine points related to the Final Report's phrasing. 
  Others accused the IAHC of conspiring to destroy the alternative registries. 
</p>
<p>In an attempt to gain legitimacy, on March 3, 1997, the alternative registry 
  community held a charter meeting for an association they call Enhanced DNS (eDNS). 
  However, in the past year, non-standard TLDs have garnered the support of less 
  than 1% of the name servers in operation Internet-wide. Only a few, mostly small, 
  ISPs include non-standard TLDs in their DNS server caches. This means that, 
  for the vast majority of Internet users, the eDNS TLDs are still effectively 
  invisible. </p>
<p>Meanwhile, Ambler's repeated demands that the IAHC grandfather Image Online 
  Design's application met with silence from the Committee. On February 27, 1997, 
  IODesign filed suit against IANA, the IAHC and Postel, Manning and the other 
  IAHC staff members and Donald Heath and 200 John Does as individuals in California's 
  San Luis Obispo County Superior Court. The complaint alleged, in part, breach 
  of implied contract, intentional interference with contracts and with &quot;prospective 
  contractual advantage&quot; and trade libel. It asked for injunctions and unspecified 
  damages. </p>
<p>Oddly, Ambler's complaint states that it does not seek to interfere with the 
  implementation of the IAHC Final Report. Instead, it focuses on IODesign's claim 
  of intellectual property status for .WEB, and seeks an order to permit IODesign 
  to operate .WEB as an exclusive registry and to force IANA to support it on 
  the Internet root name servers. </p>
<p>Thus, the call for registrar applications is still expected to go out once 
  the gTLD Memorandum of Understanding (the legal enabling document) is signed 
  by IANA (which started the whole process) and by ISOC (whose President will 
  chair the IAHC until the enabling Memoranda of Understanding are completed). 
  The application period will last 60 days and will be followed by a 30 day applicant 
  review period. The lottery and the announcement of the first group of new registrars 
  will be held the following day. </p>
<p><b>Business Considerations </b></p>
<p>For most corporate and organizational networks, the additional gTLDs will have 
  no meaningful technical impact. If you're implementing BIND on your corporate 
  nameservers, once the new registries begin operation, you'll merely need to 
  download the latest iteration of the cache file and restart your DNS in order 
  to include the new gTLDs. Instead, the issues the Final Report raises are business 
  and political ones. </p>
<p>Should your company stick with NSI's &quot;name-brand&quot;, but increasingly 
  crowded .COM, .EDU, .NET and .ORG name space, despite their lopsided trademark 
  dispute resolution policy? Or, should it stake a claim in the new, uncrowded 
  name spaces, where it will, at least initially, still be possible to obtain 
  a 2- or 3-letter domain name? If you go with the new name spaces, in which one 
  or which ones should you register? Should you jump on .FIRM or wait a year or 
  two for .CORP, .BIZ or .INC? </p>
<p>Ask yourself, &quot;What's in a name..?&quot; <br>
</p>
<p></p>
<p></p>
<p> Source : <a href="http://www.starkrealities.com/"  target="_blank">http://www.starkrealities.com/</a><br>
</p>

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