On Tue, 5 Jun 2001, Don Cameron wrote: > Sadly, even some of the postings to this list over recent months are not > suggestive that the brief has been met - that there is still a considerable > amount of work to be done. On the topic of auDA membership, I expected auDA to have more members than it currently does. But more interesting is the prescence iiNet (WA's oldest and largest ISP) has in auDA: 20% of the demand class members (as of 11/2000) were staff at iiNet around the turn of 1998/1999. Many of them (53%) no longer work at iiNet and some of them aren't even involved in the ISP industry anymore. I asked a couple of them if they knew they were auDA members and what they got from their $100. One had forgotten he was a member entirely, the other remembered he was a member but has never paid for membership and assumed iiNet was picking up the tab. iiNet also hosts the auDA DNS mailing list, the auda.org.au web-site and two of the auDA directors/officers work for iiNet (MM - iiNet's MD, and Kim - iiNet's webmaster). I'm not saying it's a bad thing for an ISP's staff to become interested in Internet issues (far from it), but it is interesting that approx. 50% [1] of an ISPs staff be auDA members, and that the ISP _appears_ [2] to pay for their individual memberships. Perhaps it's this type of thing kre sees as a lack of even representation of the Australian Internet community in auDA? "If auDA develops as it is, or was, planned to develop - as an organisation with a fairly large membership, from all interested sectors of the community..." PD [1] From memory, iiNet had about 60 staff members at the turn of 1999/2000, and 30 of them are listed as D members as of 27/11/00 [2] Emphasis on "appears" - from a massive sample space of only 6%. -- Paul Day Email: bonfire§bur.st Web: www.bur.st/~bonfireReceived on Tue Jun 05 2001 - 17:36:24 UTC
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