From: bmanning@vacation.karoshi.com [mailto:bmanning@vacation.karoshi.com] Sent: Monday, May 21, 2001 4:02 PM
Since INT is for intenational treaty organization, the use of INT internally would create a collision. Thereby, masking the entire INT TLD from the clueless org that did that. In past /ICANN/DNSO discussions it has been suggested, that we reserve a LOCAL or PRIVATE TLD for internal use only. Let me know what y'all think and which one y'all prefer. My personal preference is for both (three tiered <Internet>/Local/Private). The next question is; should this be an RFC?
INT was originally earmarked for multinational organizations. It was then inclusive of INTernet infrastructure and only later was the multinational charter clarified to restrict these groups to international treaty organizations.
There is work being done in the IETF to create such a private use TLD.
Where? Also, this may bring on a jurisdiction issue with ICANN/DNSO. It is the ICANN that is recommending new TLDs to the DOC, not the IETF. In order tfor that effort to comply with WIP process, it should make attempts to surface within relevent ICANN activity as well. Otherwise, ICANN doesn't know about it and can't make appropriate recommendations. I'm very much involved in that area and they are invisible to every one, in the DNSO. This effects the open/transparent process and if they don't want to catch a LOT of political flak (consider this fair-warning), they need to widen the visibility of their effort. This effects ICANN policy directly and IETF isn't a policy org. They are a PSO, not a DNSO. -- ROELAND M.J. MEYER /USG/DOC/NTIA/ICANN/DNSO member