On Sun, 10 Jun 2001, JIM FLEMING wrote: > As many people are aware, the "toy" IPv4 Internet is useful for > doing "proof-of-concept" development of a TLD and all the needed > infrastructure, prior to becoming a commercial fixture, set in > bedrock on stable IPv6, IPv8 and/or IPv16 networks. As shown below, What precisely do (g)TLDs have to do with the underlying network infrastructure ? Nothing ? Thought so. > Multiple "roots" are no longer needed. At best they are out-dated > publishers of information about TLD Nameserver Clusters. Some people > apparently still find it useful to depend on a "root", as opposed to > finding the "dominant" TLD Clusters via simple software. Am I to understand that you are advocating having multiple 'root' level nameservers? Or that a process of 'natural selection' should be used to determine which root level NS to use ? > Multiple TLD Clusters are new. There is merit in having redundancy. > Unfortunately, consumers will have to learn through their registrar > or registry, that they would be prudent to register in BOTH TLD Cluster > for the most reliable, stable service, with the widest reach. The > SLD.TLD cluster is of course usually unique. How an end user's resolver > locates the SLD.TLD Cluster does not impact the end-users's resolver > interaction with the SLD.TLD Cluster. So users should register with every registrar that offers a TLD ? Good for the registrar, but hardly fair for the users... oh wait a second, you're representing a registrar, not the users. I guess the logic is self-explanatory... Regards, SaliyaReceived on Tue Jun 12 2001 - 11:09:28 UTC
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