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RE: AGN-DNS EARTH/USA Registry Terms and Conditions FIRST DRAFT



This still does not alter the fact that you are endeavouring to pre-empt and subvert the objectives and procedures of IAHC.

How can the committee possibly be seen to grant a domain to an organisation that has cynically acted autonomously in claiming and using a TLD name that has not been granted in due process, and apparently will continue to do so regardless of the outcome of the IAHC deliberations. If this unacceptable (and farcical) situation was given any sort of credence whatsoever by IAHC or any other organisation, we might as well all just get on with selecting and using whatever TLD names we wanted right now and tell IAHC to not bother.

I am sure that neither IAHC or anyone else will seek to prevent your activities with your assumed TLD names, but you had better accept the fact that they will only be of significance (as related to AGN ) to a diminutive fraction of the global Internet, while those that are ultimately awarded these domains in due IAHC process will have complete root server authority, and therefore total accessibility and recognition by the global Internet.

When are you and your like minded minority going to eventually realise that subverting the process by failing to recognise the role and importance of IAHC, and further making all manner of insubstantial claims and threats which are totally irrelevant without the authority of IANA and the root servers that the real Internet uses, is not only a complete and utter waste this groups time, and further is not making any sort of  positive contribution to the substantive issues under discussion.

Adrian.


 

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From: 	John Palmer
Sent: 	26 November 1996 18:19
To: 	iahc-discuss@iahc.org
Subject: 	Re: AGN-DNS EARTH/USA Registry Terms and Conditions FIRST DRAFT

   3> AGN has been developing USA for a year now and has many people 
      registered under that domain. You would be disrupting many web
      sites, hosts and e-mail sites
   4> In the United States, the government would not be able to 
      restrict usage because we have FCFS trademark laws and also
      the 1st amendment.
   5> AGN has developed a plan to make USA useful for both those who
      want structure (ie: domain.state.usa, domain.city.state.usa)
      and those who want a freeform domain (ie: Something.USA). This
      sets us apart from the .US top level domain which is too
      strict as it only allows geographical registrations.

   AGN will continue to develope USA and hopes that the committee will not
make any decision which will disrupt several hundred sites already using 
USA.

   John Palmer