This is my last post to such a massic cross post - I will cut the cc list to dns§intiaa in any further post I make.. > > I don't disagree with Geoff, just a few added comments: > > > 3. Will Melbourne IT expose its accounts to public scrutiny in > > operating this service? > > One could argue that that is their business. Especially if the > non-exclusive nature of the delegation turns into reality with > multiple organizations providing competing services. I would make a stronger statement: One could argue that that is their business IF AND ONLY IF the domain administration function is non-exclusive. While this organisation is in a monopoly position there remains the potential for the uncharitable view to be expressed that this is a simply a somewhat indirect method for the University of Melbourne to claw back some of this recent 12% funding cutback imposed by the Federal Government. Now while of course I do not personally subscribe to such a base view of Melbourne IT, my point is that while the current monopoly operates with charging applied the organisation cannot readily defend itself from the accusation of all kinds of base profiteering without a very open approach to the income and expenses and services operated by this organisation in undertaking this function. > Mind you, with > just 10,000 odd domains served in .com.au that doesn't leave a lot of > annual revenue to distribute amongst multiple competing entities. > Personally I think that delegation to two separate entities would have > made the situation much less divisive, but would it have been viable > at this stage? Gees 10,000 x $100 with a growth rate of doubling a year is not a lot of revenue? hmmm. > > 4. What will happen to financial surpluses generated by this activity? ... > The summary? If there are multiple, competing .com.au service > providers that are constrained to send some revenue to AUSCERT, then > IMHO their accounts and surpluses are their own business. If a registry operator pays a "license fee" to a relevant public individual membership body such as ISOC-AU for a non-exclusive domain administration role then I for one would indicate that you are getting towards a structure which is far more stable in terms of acceptability. It would then be incumbent on the public membership body to put in place a mechanism for disbursment of the funds so received to the benefit of the Internet communicaty here in Australia, and that could well include financial support to a body like AUSCERT. Given that the domain administrative function is then competitively based there is less pressure on any particular operator to open the kimono with respect to their operation and the movement of funds. If any particular operation is overservicing it will lose out competitively. > [ Why is it not a side-track? Because the AUNIC services are one of > the few services which pretty much all .au Internet users/ISPs must > use, therefore it makes some sense to have that revenue stream fund > essential net services that have no natural revenue base, such as the > .au name servers, AUSCERT, etc. So where you read AUSCERT above, > convert that to essential net services with no natural revenue base.] I think we are singing much the same tune here. Thanks, GeoffReceived on Tue Nov 12 1996 - 22:23:12 UTC
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.3.0 : Sat Sep 09 2017 - 22:00:02 UTC