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    This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
    .af Redelegation: Another Government-Initiated Redelegation | Log in/Create an Account | Top | 10 comments | Search Discussion
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    Finding the Admin Contact
    by dpf (dpf@ihug.co.nz) on Wednesday January 15 2003, @02:33PM (#10969)
    User #2770 Info | http://www.kiwiblog.co.nz/
    I don't think there is anything suspicious about the fact that for some years the admin contact was not contactable but that he has now been located.

    To be blunt if I was the person listed as being in charge of the Afghanistan country code while the Taliban were in power I'd be going into hiding also and not answering my e-mail.

    With a change to a more benign government and presumably a local rather than IANA search for him, no surprise he was located and agreeable.

    DPF
    [ Reply to This | Parent ]
    ccTLDs are a country's property
    by vbertola on Wednesday January 15 2003, @10:54PM (#10975)
    User #3435 Info | http://bertola.eu.org/
    Honestly, I can't see any problem in the fact that a redelegation is initiated by the government, especially in the case of underdeveloped ccTLDs where the local Internet community is presumably non-existant.

    Though we might not like it completely, a country's ccTLD, as all its resources, is a "property" of its government. In case of a conflict between the local Internet community and the government about who manages the ccTLD, the government has "the knife from the side of the handle": for example, it might simply pass a law to prevent anyone else in the country from running the ccTLD. The local Internet community may try to prevent this by acting on the press and the public opinion, but it has no actual power to stop a government-mandated redelegation, nor it has IANA.

    And if you don't accept this, then it descends that a country's ccTLD is the property of the Department of Commerce of the US Government, something that the rest of the world cannot accept. I don't think that IANA, in any case, should have the right to decide who manages a foreign country's ccTLD (though it should foster the finding of an agreed solution between the government, the present registry and the community, rather than immediately following any request from the government). I definitely prefer .it to be ruled by the Italian government (no matter how bad it might be) than by the US one.
    --vb. (Vittorio Bertola)
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