NeuStar to Manage .US Registry 217
flatt writes: "The US Government picked NeuStar, the managers of the upcoming .biz registry, to manage the .us registry today. NeuStar has made a press release and there's an AP article over at Excite about it. Finally a country code that I'll register in." This has been brewing for a long time, and has been criticized as a giveaway.
Changes We Are Seeing (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Changes We Are Seeing (Score:2)
"The business of America is business."
--Calvin Coolidge, Thirtieth President, 1923-1929
... of course, right after his terms were up, the business of America was more along the lines of eating shoe lint and wallpapering the outhouse with stock certificates.
Re:Changes We Are Seeing (Score:1)
I've used both kermit and x-modem. Personally I prefer Z-Modem since it can detect errors better [CRC32] and restart
And stop trying to be cool because you used a computer in the 1990's. I'm 19 years old and I grew up sysop'ing two BBSes myself. I certainly don't think I'm a hackerz elitez or something because I know how to launch renegade [under DesqView no less]....
/rant
Re:Changes We Are Seeing (Score:2, Informative)
Network Solutions was awarded a government grant and had sole responsibility over all domains until the government got a clue as to what people were complaining about and started doing their job of regulation (something that should have been done around oh say '92) - under that contract Network Solutions (transferred to Verisign who bought out NSI) had responsibility for all those domains until the contract expired in '99 (including the
.US has been the bastard child TLD of the internet trying desparately to hold on to the idea of orderly conduct,
Excite article... (Score:5, Interesting)
-CT
Re:Excite article... (Score:3, Interesting)
It was understood in the past that delegations were to be free. How about now? I don't intend to charge for them in my "teeming metropolis" (cough), but what about others? What's the policy? Will I have my domain revoked? Will I be charged for it? Can I get myname.us?
Re:Excite article... (Score:2)
Re:Excite article... (Score:4, Insightful)
We met both conditions and yet the squatter (that wasn't even within 300 miles of here and wanted extortion rates) who was never authorized by the community was both registered and extended grandfather rights in violation of Verisign policy by Verisign. We became quickly aware that Verisign simply wanted to destroy
What about complaints to Verisign? Try filing one... they take 6 weeks (no exaggeration) to respond, always with a form letter either with useless advice that doesn't apply, or statements of the obvious like "in order to register in this subdomain, please contact the subdomain administrator" - yea, call the squatters to complain about them squatting.
I'm confident there are thousands of others like us that were willing to handle subdomain registration at no expense (same as running primary & secondary dns for folks), but because Verisign hozed it up, we'll have another landrush feeding a government-granted monopoly.
It's little different than granting the railroads land to sell in Wyoming, Nebraska, Utah, etc., except after they were inhabited...
*scoove*
p.s. If you're not happy with the situation, be sure to add Verisign to your "banned vendor" list and make the Internet a better place.
Re:Excite article... (Score:1)
Cool (Score:2, Interesting)
These guys are cool!
What kind of hardware is this? Someone here know anything about these things?
Re:Cool (Score:2)
lemme see... neustar.com [neustar.com], typical yucky canned art in ever-so-lucent style, nice ethnic balance in people-focused pictures, blurbs about the ceo-vision-speaking guy blathering on cnn, speaking at some suit summit, featured on businessnow, and a company profile [neustar.com] that'd win you a buzzword bingo challenge in 6 seconds flat (first paragraph keywords: rampant, globalization, ensuring, interoperability, networks, ubiquity, internet, packet... and so on. Print this site off and try it on your friends! Makes a great party game!)
Aha... came from Lockheed Martin.
Airplanes, TLD's, what's the difference? It's all marketing. Looks like these guys took a few pages from The Corporation's [thecorporation.com] website.
*scoove*
Re:Cool (Score:1)
should of course read: "solutions fundamentally to solve these challenges". Tut tut.
In fact, in the current political climate it might be a good idea to excise the word "fundamentally".
It might also be worth replacing a few words with these, which emerged from dissociated-press:
proliferampant
billinghouse
administernet
.info (Score:1)
Re:.info (Score:1)
hahahah - you think it was a nightmare for you? i work for a registrar and i can't even begin to tell you the horrors that i experienced.
Now! Register your domains! (Score:4, Funny)
http://please.kug.us/
Re:Now! Register your domains! (Score:5, Funny)
(no http:// coz I fail to understand what it has to do with domain names)
Re:Now! Register your domains! (Score:1, Offtopic)
*Homer J. Simpson pronouncing 'Uruguay'*
At last, the truth revealed. (Score:1)
new TLD's (Score:5, Funny)
So will there also be a
Re:new TLD's (Score:2)
BTW, what are the rules behind grabbing a domain in a country that isn't yours? It seems to me that if your physical server is outside of the USA, you should not be able to reg a
Of course, that opens up questions about load-balancing techniques and back-end servers, but my guess it that every porn site in the Cayman Islands will have a "cum.c.us" as soon as possible.
Re:new TLD's (Score:1)
IANA [iana.org] has a complete list if you want a perusal.
Re:new TLD's (Score:1)
Hey, I've got an idea! (Score:3, Funny)
I can see it now. We are already having to fight over two TLD's (one that was squatted (.com) and one that was given to the wrong people (.co.hillsborough.fl.us). Now we are going to have to buy and maintain 17 seperate web addresses just to point them all to one server so that people can find us. Great! Can't wait!
I know this has been mentioned before, but what is the point of opening up the TLDs? Companies are just going to have to buy the ones (or sue to steal them back) that infringe upon them. So why not leave them alone?
Re:Hey, I've got an idea! (Score:2)
Relying on DNS to act as your portal is stupid. It would be best for all if TLDs were completely open, but there would be suggestions (by W3C or IETF) for 'official' ones. Some people really just love the idea of artificial scarcity of technically unlimited resources, like domain names.
Be the first defense contractor on your block! (Score:2)
You have to admit. Owning a TLD is cooler than being a HoJo's on the Ohio Turnpike complete with pay toilets. Not only do you sell things that cost you nothing to make (more profitable than selling slightly used and still glowing land in Nevada), but it gives you that Intellectual Property high that makes you the rage at all the beltway cocktail parties.
Imagine all the hookups and special deals Jeff Ganek will be doing for his corporate friends - couldn't get mycompany.com because some little squat company beat you to the Internet? No problem... we'll yank their
So congratulations to our ever-so-savvy beltway lobbyists. Let's give the boys at Neustar a motto that reflects their vision:
Neustar: The Internet's Pay Toilet.
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Be the first defense contractor on your block! (Score:2)
apparently hojos learned something that our new
*scoove*
Re:Hey, I've got an idea! (Score:1)
> Companies are just going to have to buy the
> ones (or sue to steal them back) that infringe
> upon them.
You can keep creating top level domains 'til you're blue in the face, the guys with money and lawyers will keep grabbing 'em.
How about TLDs for the various stock exchanges, like
Re:Hey, I've got an idea! (Score:2)
Consider where the money is going though...
By the sound of things we have just seen the creation of yet another
But as this is in the direct financial interests of the people creating the problem dosn't expect anything to be done about it soon.
An International Internet (Score:5, Interesting)
I know that people (esp in the mainstream press) marvel at how global the Internet is, but the fact is that it is inherently biased towards people in the US. Personally, unless I have reason to think otherwise (e.g. oxford.edu, moscowballet.org, airfrance.com, etc) I (incorrectly) tend to assume that a domain is on my side of the pond (or Pacific, or Canadian or Mexican border). It strikes me as unfair that a business running in the UK realistcally has to grab both .co.uk and .com domains to be sure that they reach their (UK) customers while I could simply buy eds-taco-palace.com and everyone knows it's in the States.
On the gripping hand... if we are entering an era of U.S. hedgmony, perhaps this skewed view is appropriate. After all, if the Romans had the Internet, would they have confided themselves to a ".rmn" country code?
PS - Random thought - imagine IP addresses in Rome: ccv.xcv.xxx.ii. But then they'd have had to cross the Atlantic and conquer the Aztecs to get zero and make it work...
Re:An International Internet (Score:2, Troll)
That's because only we Americans have lousy enough taste to both:
:-)
Re:An International Internet (Score:1)
This reason is why I never bothered to register a domain when I was running my own home-based computer repair business. I have the state tax license and the business checking account, but no web-page. People would ask me about it, and I would generally tell them I don't see the need to let the whole world read about my business on the web, when only people in my immediate area are going to be calling me.
This new scheme with
It makes a lot more sense than $75 for my_company.com. And another $75 for my_company.net. And another $75 for my_compnay.com. And another $75 for my_compnay.net. And another $75 for mycompany.com. And another $75 for mycompany.net....
Re:An International Internet (Score:1)
Re:An International Internet (Score:1)
PS - After writting the above, I noticed another "US-ism." Specifically, the use of "American" for "relating to the United States," as opposed to the many other residents of North and South America. In defense, I'm tempted to point out the use of the term "Norteamericano" in Mexico for refering to us gringos (even though Mexico is in North America), but I'm scared because I leaned that in High School, as well.
Re:An International Internet (Score:1)
Hehe, I believe that technically Mexico is a part of North America (i.e. NAFTA includes Mexico. . Many people separate it from the US & Canada not because of geographical reasons, but rather economic reasons: It's easier to say North America and mean the US & Canada.
Its in both (Score:2)
Re:An International Internet (Score:2, Insightful)
I think the unfairness cuts the other way. A UK business could at least buy a .co.uk address, and be sure they weren't competing with the whole world for it. American businesses, on the other hand, have had to compete with everyone on the planet to secure a .com.
Having said that, I don't imagine that too many people have cried themselves to sleep over these issues.
Re:An International Internet (Score:2, Interesting)
Good post.
The reason for choosing an international domain over a local domain has two reasons:
* Unless you are unable to get a 'net connection from where you are. :-)
Are you sure? (Score:1)
Or maybe this is just another example of how americans think they're the centre of the internet. Do you know the rest of the world loves getting the
www.she.com
www.tom.com
www.singtao.com
www.mingpao.com
Even new zealand is getting its dose of local
Re:An International Internet (Score:1)
What's really offensive is whitehouse.gov and the like. If there's anything that ought to be under .us, isn't it that country's government?
They're not the world government yet!
Re:An International Internet (Score:2)
Random thought - imagine IP addresses in Rome: ccv.xcv.xxx.ii.
/me shudders thinking of how they would have represented approximations to PI.
Says it all, doesn't it... (Score:2)
I think this says it all:
"Dot-US" and XRP/BEEP data point (Score:4, Interesting)
Hopefully one of these shared technical developments will be the reuse of the eXtensible Registry Protocol (XRP), which is defined as a profile for the Internet-standard BEEP framework [ietf.org]. NeuStar used hardened implementations of the BEEP framework, called "Beepcore," that my former employer Invisible Worlds developed under contract.
I don't know of any open source implementations for XRP, but these Beepcore implementations [beepcore.org] are available as free software under a BSD-style license at Beepcore.org [beepcore.org].
............ kris
Kris Magnusson
(formerly marketing and developer relations manager for Invisible Worlds)
Re:"Dot-US" and XRP/BEEP data point (Score:1)
EPP BEEP Transport [ietf.org]
It may be that NeuStar is using XRP as a brand name for their implementation of EPP. FWIW there is an open source implementation of EPP available on SourceForge:
EPP on SourceForge [sourceforge.net]
Everyone's got a way to take advantage of 9-11 (Score:2, Funny)
.us domain (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:.us domain (Score:2)
Which is really how the entire thing should work. One side effect is making cybersquatting difficult because identity checking is easier
The guy in charge of administering my records lives here in the same town as I, and has been real quick about changin ip associations when I've needed to do so (like 2-hour turnaround).
The problem is that, as with any system, there are good people and bad people. The solution is deal with the bad.
Effectivly this action is almost analagous to the US repealing the 10th ammendment on the basis that officials in some small towns didn't do a good job...
Not sure I like the idea of paying 5 bucks for what has been free, and turning over admin to some faceless corporation that's *very* likely to be less responsive than what I've been used to.
It's quite possible that the worst operators of the existing system are corporates anyway.
The point of country TLD's (Score:2)
Another point to consider is who can buy these. Will it be US people only or will it be like cc, tv, to, etc which will sell to anyone?
On a third note, do I care? I already have a couple
Re:The point of country TLD's (Score:2, Informative)
I don't know if that was the original intention, but it certainly hasn't been the practice. Outside of .us - domain (esp. before .com became 'hot') companies and universities did use country TLDs, many still do. Sometimes multi-national co's have localized sites (www.company.com for 'main page', www.company.fr for french version etc) using these too.
Re:The point of country TLD's (Score:3, Interesting)
The vast majority of business is geographically (according to either physical or political geography) based. Though the scale of course varies..
The example "clothingstore.los-angeles.ca.us" given was a good example, but now they want to make it "clothingstore.us"? Doesn't that pretty much defeat the point?
The point has already been defeated, by "mom and pops" winding up with
in other news... (Score:5, Funny)
Too little too late... (Score:1, Redundant)
The only purposes I can see are these...
1. International companies can now add more seperation to their domain names. For instance, sony.com.us vs. sony.com.jp.
2. Cybersquatters can now go and grab domains like microsoft.com.us and send out porn spam trying to fool the clueless into clicking on the link.
Am I missing something?
I really don't see any great advantage to them releasing
My DNS servers are ready, how about yours?
Article title (Score:2, Funny)
All Your Domain Are Belong to
Re:Article title (Score:1)
Scrap .com, all use contry codes. (Score:4, Insightful)
Country code suffixes such as ".fr" for France have been sources of national pride worldwide, but in the United States it is the forgotten stepchild compared with ".com."
It's always annoyed me how the world seems to use country codes for it's TLD's, and then the US has some other TLDs that is just uses.
For example, when shopping online I want to know if a company will ship to the UK. If it is a .co.uk company I can be sure it will. If it is a .com, it might or might not.
Essentially it seems logical for organisations to just register the TLDs for the countries in which they operate/are registered, and for the .com TLD to be scrapped (Although this would never happen).
Oh, I'd scrap .edu too. .ac.us would be a fine replacement.
Re:Scrap .com, all use contry codes. (Score:1)
It's always annoyed me how the world seems to use country codes for it's TLD's, and then the US has some other TLDs that is just uses.
Bastards! What, do they think they invented the Internet or something?
For example, when shopping online I want to know if a company will ship to the UK. If it is a .co.uk company I can be sure it will. If it is a .com, it might or might not.
So why not just stick to .co.uk companies? How will using the .us TLD help you here, since it is quite possible for a company in the States to ship to the UK? Your real complaint seems to be that there are some companies using purportedly international domain like .com (although, really, .int is the OTID) without having a certain level of international support. Just as the new TLDs don't solve any real problems, increased usage of the .us TLD doesn't solve your real problem.
Essentially it seems logical for organisations to just register the TLDs for the countries in which they operate/are registered, and for the .com TLD to be scrapped (Although this would never happen).
And what is the "logical" solution to country neutral organizations? Should I really care where in the world Slashdot or The Onion is? You're taking outdated geographical notions and superimposing them on the Internet, which goes beyond illogical to simply unreasonable. There's more to the Internet than bloody shopping.
Re:Scrap .com, all use contry codes. (Score:1)
Bastards! What, do they think they invented the Internet or something?
It seems odd that someone would invent one system for themself, and a completely different one for all others... although this mess probably evolved, as mess does.
So why not just stick to .co.uk companies
Lots of .co.uk companies think it is cool to be a .com! Depending on what you are looking for, you can be limited by adding .co.uk as a constraint - esp if bargain hunting.
It is true that lots of US companies will ship, as will companies from all around the world, but there isn't a term you can easily put into Google to differentiate such companies. Putting in site:.co.uk should do a good job, but doesn't for reasons given.
You're taking outdated geographical notions and superimposing them on the Internet, which goes beyond illogical to simply unreasonable
I'm not sure I agree with the whole Internet as a different place concept. It is very firmly rooted in the real world. Companies, be them .com's or whatever will have some registered trading address that ties them to some place on Earth. Some may have a number of addresses, in which case they can take a number of country codes.
In fact, if you think about it, a limited company is a legal entity, so it must be tied to laws of at least one country.
Slashdot or The Onion is
Slashdot isOh, and I'd keep .org for global organisations such as Amnesty International.
Re:Scrap .com, all use contry codes. (Score:2)
It's actually a little more complex than that. A company selling a physical product is certainly tied very much to geography. One which sells something which can be sent over the Internet (some kind of service or IP) could be less tied. Especially if they allow use of many currencies. The issue of where they actually are occurs when something goes wrong or there are other issues of legality.
Companies, be them
If you want a special address you tend to have to be big. A closer analogy would be with telephone numbers, if you want anything other than a standard geographic number you have to specifically ask and probably pay. (Quite likely you still have the standard number anyway.)
75% minority (Score:1)
"I bet it really gets under your skin that we don't have metric time either."
No, but it makes us laugh that you still launch your spaceships using imperial measurement units...times change.....
Re:Scrap .com, all use contry codes. (Score:1)
the new TLD will be known as <img src=foo.gif> "the domain formerly known as
Re:Scrap .com, all use contry codes. (Score:2)
That's not that far away.
http://ml.register.com/index-ss.cgi?6309|26935851
Welcome to hell, folks.
Re:Scrap .com, all use contry codes. (Score:2)
Problem is that this needed to have happened before the ".com bubble".
Problem is that DNS names have been treated as arbitary strings, rather than postal addresses or telephone numbers. (Indeed maybe you could make a rule such that as a precondition for any
Re:Scrap .com, all use contry codes. (Score:1)
> number.
Why should I have an internationally tollfree number to register a
> Problem is that this won't work for the
> US/Canada/etc because they don't have a proper
> country code.)
They have : Both +1.
E.g. from Germany, you dial 001-976-555-4678, just like you would dial 0033-1-12345678 for a phone in Paris (IIRC).
Re:Scrap .com, all use contry codes. (Score:2)
Why should I have an internationally tollfree number to register a
Because the only way you will get one of these is by operating in more than one country. Also it's an additional barrier to any entity not an international company being able to get a
> Problem is that this won't work for the > US/Canada/etc because they don't have a proper > country code.)
They have : Both +1.
No they don't the whole of the NANP is under +1, with no easy way to work out which of the nearly 20 odd countries a number applies to.
Re:Scrap .com, all use country codes. (Score:1)
Missing the whole point of domains (Score:1)
Re:Missing the whole point of domains (Score:1)
the purpose of domain names was for the identification and organization of entities. In the original scheme they had accounted for commercial, educational, network,and nonprofit entities that were globally based, and things that were to be regionally and locationally based represented by the
now guess what people are discovering - locational identification of entities are important and virtually impossible to do in the current scheme. we screwed the system up ourselves!! and in the process alienated some of the greatest minds and contributors.
Might as well... (Score:1, Troll)
How does .us differ? (Score:2)
toysr.us (Score:1)
Lawsuit bait... register r.us (Score:2)
geeks.r.us
babes.r.us
trolls.r.us
lawsuits.r.us
etc...
Re:Lawsuit bait... register r.us (Score:1)
Re:Lawsuit bait... register r.us (Score:2)
Oh you of little humor! :-)
But on that topic, I always wondered how x.com got registered (now owned by paypal, was a paypal competitor in the beginning).
Re:Lawsuit bait... register r.us (Score:1)
If you want to go the lawsuit route, you should go straight for toys.r.us.
So does this mean... (Score:1)
censorship (Score:1)
i wouldn't be surprised...It's a perfectly legitimate statement, but when did that ever stop anyone?
Maybe I missed the point... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Maybe I missed the point... (Score:1)
I don't think NeuStar manages .biz! (Score:1)
I have to pay yet another fee? (Score:1)
Every one of these increases the yearly tax on businesses, making it more likely that only big businesses can keep up and that little businesses won't be able to. Now it's not $35/yr for a domain, but $35*6 or *8 or *10 to keep even one point of contact maintained. And it's even worse if you have a multi-word name because you need twice as much money for my-acme.com, myacme.com, my-acme.us, myacme.us, my-acme.com.us, myacme.com.us, and so on.
I don't know about anyone else, but I am fed up with new TLDs. It may be useful to those who haven't invested yet, but anyone who hasn't invested yet isn't in it for business. To those of us who have bought in, it's a constant scramble to keep up and extraordinarily painful.
ICANN seems to me an out-of-control organization with no apparent checks and balances to its exercising its capricious whims. I am quite upset about this, but have no idea who to complain to. I suspect the answer is: there is no one. If someone knows otherwise, I'd be interested.
Re:I have to pay yet another fee? (Score:2, Insightful)
You can't be serious! That's like saying if the company's name is Jones, they have to buy every address with the word "jones" in it. What about people who have the last name "Jones" or have some other legitimate reason for wanting a site named "Jones" or "Acme"??? (Or even ihateacme.com--what, are people who have a reason to hate a company not allowed to speak?)
The only way companies need to protect their names on the internet is if someone is attempting to misrepresent themselves as being the company or agents of the company. That is the reason tradmarks were created. If a company's site is acme.com, and someone else owns acme.us or acme.org, the Acme company still doesn't have a real reason to be threated by those websites unless they claim to be part of the Acme company!
Q: Who managed it before them? (Score:1)
.US rules are only in Adobe? (Score:1)
So, it appears that the public not allowed to see the rules for the .US domain unless it helps spread Adobe software to other computers while Adobe actively attempts to ruin lives [eff.org]. Adobe still has not even bailed Dimitry Sklyarov out after screwing him over. Meanwhile, at least as of October 31, the U.S. Department of Commerce only converted the press release to a normal format, but doesn't have the real information for free in a normal format.
Has anyone converted these nonstandard documents [doc.gov] into an standard Internet format (like plain text or HTML) so that free society can see them? If so, please post a URL. Thanks!
P.S. for anyone who cares: At the bottom of that page is contact information for "further assistance".
State Gubmints Can't Get It Right... (Score:1)
TLD's are bastardized beyond belief. What do you think about the Department of Motor Vehicles in Connecticut having a
How did this happen, and since it did, is there any rhyme or reason to any domain naming? (Apologies to non-US readers)
I wouldn't want to be without it... (Score:1)
I would not ever want to be without the
Embrace the country you live in! Send it forth on your email addresses and webpages. Shout it loud and be proud.
.us for a better society? profiteering? (Score:1)
so people are just going to register for .us domains and the country becomes unified and stronger?
or will pepolpe be registering .us because they're patriotic and this is a nice way to profit from that?
Re:word docs (Score:1)
Re:only us residents (Score:5, Insightful)
Since most countries are charging for domains in their TLD the domain operator usually sees it as a profit center, and with the exception of the few remaining communist countries - and maybe some of them, too - I suspect you can get a registration in just about any country's tld whether or not you live there.
Paul Robinson <Postmaster@paul.washington.dc.us [mailto]>
Re:only us residents (Score:1)
One notable exception: France. In France, to get a second-level, you must be french company and take your name, or have a registered trademark, and take that trademark.
There is a second-level reserved for persons, and then you can get as third-level: your_real_name-[you_choose_it_but_non_empty]
Re:I win! (Score:1)
Re:.us (Score:2, Funny)
you mean .crap (Score:1)
Ahh, forget it.
Re:Hate to be a karma whore... (Score:1, Redundant)
Hate to be a karma whore... (Score:0, Offtopic)
... American identification is of
...
/bin/laden
by CtrlPhreak on 08:01 PM October 30th, 2001 (#2500364)
(User #226872 Info | http://ist05.ma.psu.edu/~bld168 | Last Journal: 11:53 PM October 1st, 2001)
But people are already complaining about it being slashdotted. So here's the excite AP story.
NEW YORK (AP) - Patriotism is about to get easier online.
The Commerce Department selected NeuStar Inc. on Monday to run
domain names ending in ".us." With the announcement comes the
ability to get non-geographic addresses such as
"clothingstore.us," rather than the more cumbersome
"clothingstore.los-angeles.ca.us."
The new rules, expected to take effect early next year, are
designed to get more use out of ".us." Country code suffixes such as ".fr" for France have been sources of national pride
worldwide, but in the United States it is the forgotten stepchild compared with ".com."
NeuStar officials are hoping to change that attitude and said
recent terrorism events may give ".us" even more of a boost.
"The fact is right now,
increased importance," said Jeff Ganek, NeuStar's chairman and
chief executive.
Also Monday, the department announced a five-year agreement with
Educause, a nonprofit consortium, to run the ".edu" suffix.
Community colleges will be able to claim ".edu" names
beginning Nov. 12. In the past, ".edu" was limited primarily to four-year colleges and universities in the United States.
The ".us" domain name will be restricted to U.S. residents and
companies or organizations that operate in the United States,
though the system will rely partly on self-certification and isn't
foolproof.
Many details also remain unresolved.
Public-interest groups worry that ".us" - historically the
domain of state or local governments, nonprofit organizations and schools - will become yet another frontier dominated by commercial
interests.
"A lot of people are very supportive of opening `.us' for more
commercial, small business and individual use," said Alan Davidson, associate director for the Center for Democracy and
Technology. "What's tricky is how you make sure the policies
are fair and equitable."
NeuStar officials said existing ".us" users will get to keep
their names, and local entities that now assign geographically oriented names like "anyname.los-angeles.ca.us" can continue
doing so.
In addition, a number of names have been set aside, including
"kids.us" as a possible children's channel and "parks.us" as a
central resource for parks in the United States.
The company will establish a policy advisory council to address
usage issues, said James Casey, NeuStar's director of policy and
business development. The council's composition and other details
are still pending.
In the past, ".us" policy was handled by the University of
Southern California's Information Sciences Institute, which delegated assignments of specific names to some 800 individuals and
organizations.
To accommodate the distributed assignments, names became long
and cumbersome. It was also difficult to figure out where to go to
get them. Though businesses were allowed to claim ".us" names,
few did.
The change in ".us" is separate from last year's decision by
the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers to create
seven Internet suffixes to relieve overcrowding in ".com."
A NeuStar subsidiary, NeuLevel Inc., is the operator of
".biz," one of the new suffixes. NeuStar's ".us" database will
share some of the security and technical developments being used in
".biz."
NeuStar, based in Washington, D.C., also runs databases of area
codes and telephone prefixes for the nation's phone system.
The Commerce contract with NeuStar will run four years, with
options for two one-year extensions
-----
$ rm -rf
[ Reply to This | Parent ]
Note to moderators: This *is* ontopic, because it *is* the topic (despite the Slashdot tendency to post with reading the story first) and I've got enough karma left to lather, rinse, repeat a bunch of times.
Re:Hate to be a karma whore... (Score:1)
Re:Hate to be a karma whore... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Okay, perhaps now that the original Excite-AP page is finally available it's redundant, but I really wonder about people who go through stories several hours or more old looking for something to mod down. Wonder if they ever go to that much trouble looking for stuff that deserves modding up?
Re:BULLSHIT! noone was complaining, karma whore!! (Score:1)
NeuStar and NeuLevel are the same company (Score:1)
Re:Why does the US get its own Top Level domain? (Score:2, Informative)
Why does the US get its own Top Level Domain? We do;
Re:Uh, because WE INVENTED THE INTERNET. (Score:2)
It's up to each country what to do with their TLD. Until now,
The US Department of Commerce (the agency responsible for the
By the way, most countries don't require
Re:Why does the US get its own Top Level domain? (Score:1)
>domain. All other countries have
>who made theirs
Ah yes, Australia, who made theirs
If you don't like your country's ccTLD allotments, complain to your government, don't complain about mine!
Shaun