Klaus Malorny wrote: >> OK. If it is acceptable for you, allow 1 variant per name and we >> are done. >> >> That people around you are happy with at most 5 or 20 variants >> does not mean other people needing more variants may suffer >> from the trade-off. >> >> A better solution is never use IDN. That, even within European >> (French) context, capital form of 'y' with diaeresis can be 'Y' >> or 'Y' with diaeresis is already bad enough for case insensitive >> DNS.
> What's the purpose of this comment? Are you saying that you don't care > about real world problems? I'm saying you should accept the real world problems of: other people needing more variants may suffer from the trade-off. and That, even within European (French) context, capital form of 'y' with diaeresis can be 'Y' or 'Y' with diaeresis is already bad enough for case insensitive DNS. > Get rid of IDNs? Yes. As it is obvious from the beginning that IDN is not practical, I have been saying so. > Learn English or die? No, as can be seen names on passport, internationally, every country have a scripting system to represent their language in ASCII. Though some European country may insist that their passport may include Latin-1, it is not fair for the rest of the people who can't use their traditional script. > Internet back to its roots as an academic, non-commerical network? This > all would be fine to me, but unfortunately not to many people out there. A commercial network can not support something operationally impossible or, at least, impractical. Masataka Ohta PS As I repeatedly state, so called IDN is not internationalized at all and actually is localized DN, whereas ASCII DN is, like ASCII names in passports, fully internationalized. _______________________________________________ DNSOP mailing list DNSOP@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/dnsop