At the forum held in Melbourne last Friday to develop a response to the US Dept of Commerce Green Paper upon the DNS a brief one-page submission was requested from IIA/ADNA that could be both sent on behalf of those represented, as well as adopted and sent separately by those interested. A fuller response will be be delivered via NOIE at a later date. While we didn't manage to keep it to one page, the result is attached. The response can be sent via email to dns§ntia.doc.gov, and must be delivered by the end of today, March 23rd. Further details on submitting can be found at http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/domainname/022098fedreg.txt. An ASCII copy of the response as well as a Word 97 attached version are included below. Don't forget to change the attribution in the attachment if you want to send it under your own name. . . Regards, Luke Carruthers Secretary, IIA Acting Chair, ADNA ------------------------- March 21, 1998 Ms Karen Rose Office of International Affairs National Telecommunications and Information Administration Room 4701 U.S. Department of Commerce 14th and Constitution Avenue, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20230 United States of America Dear Ms Rose, Re: Improvement of Technical Management of Internet Names and Addresses This letter is a response to the Green Paper concerning DNS issued by the US Department of Commerce. It outlines in brief some issues that the Australian Internet industry has with the content of the Green Paper, and some suggestions by which the proposal contained therein could be improved. We hope that with these suggestions and those put forward by other interested parties, an effective and appropriate system for the management of Domain Names can be implemented. This response is submitted by the Australian Internet industry, coordinated by the Internet Industry Association (IIA), Australia's peak representative body for organisations commercially involved in the Internet, and Australian Domain Name Administration (ADNA), the representative body charged with the restructuring of the DNS within Australia. Further information regarding IIA can be found at http://www.iia.net.au. Further information regarding ADNA can be found at http://www.adna.asn.au. This submission is intended to be brief, with further comment to be submitted through the Australian government in due course. There are four primary issues this submission intends to address: governance, competition, self-regulation versus regulation, and jurisdiction. 1. Governance It is the Australian Internet industry's view that the body most appropriately responsible for the DNS is a newly reformed IANA (Internet Assigned Numbers Authority), with a governing board formed both from US and international interests. Australia, by virtue of its place as the fifth largest user of the Internet, should be represented upon this board, though it is more important that the appropriate processes be put in place than the interests of any one country be pursued. Incorporating the new IANA as a US company leads to a number of issues regarding jurisdiction, as referenced below. 2. Competition The function of the registry, the database of Domain Names and associated information, must be a matter of public trust, as this is the only way to ensure that the interests of the end user are adequately served. Accordingly it is not an appropriate place for competition. It is however appropriate that the registrar function, the registration of Domain Names, is an area of competition, as this will serve to provide the greatest benefit to the end user in both pricing and quality of services. 3. Self-regulation versus Regulation The Australian industry is particularly experienced in self-regulation, having pursued this approach for a number of years in many fields including telecommunications. It is our view that self-regulation is preferable to government regulation. This enables all stakeholders to be represented in discussions, without being restricted by the problem of which country's government is appropriate in which circumstance. Self-regulation needs to be backed up by a light regulatory framework however, and where international bodies with responsibility for particular areas (such as the World Intellectual Property Organisation) exist, these bodies may be able to provide this regulatory support. 4. Jurisdiction Jurisdiction over registrar operations must be divided between DNS' governing body and the country within which the registrar is operating. Jurisdiction over the DNS' governing body (assuming, as suggested above, a reformed IANA governed by an international board) is a more problematic area however, with no clear solution. It may not be practical to have participation by each and every country (or party) that may wish to do so. Equally it would be grossly improper for the United States to take an overbearing role in such a clearly international area. Our suggested approach would be for a model similar to that of the United Nations Security Council, with appropriate representation by the key players together with implied obligations to those parties not directly represented. As a final point, it is the strong recommendation of the Australian industry that wider international consultation must be carried out before the implementation of any process that has such a great effect upon international industry. The DNS is one of the foundations of electronic commerce, and will have an impact upon billions of dollars worth of future revenues for many countries. It is too important an issue to be decided upon without the full involvement of industries in all countries that make up the electronic marketplace. Yours sincerely, Luke Carruthers Acting Chair Australian Domain Name Administration Secretary Internet Industry Association Attachment converted: Obnoxious:Response to Green Paper on DNS. (WDBN/MSWD) (00011FEC)Received on Mon Mar 23 1998 - 16:26:17 UTC
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