On Feb 9, 2011, at 11:06 AM, Eric Brunner-Williams wrote: > well, i've argued new gtld registry operators in general do not benefit from > a manditory v6 reachability requirement at transition to delegation, a > position unpopular with v6 evangelicals and others who suppose that new gtld > registry operators will exist to serve "the next billion users" rather than > to offer alternate name space views to the existing {b,m}illions of v4 > addressed spindles. > I disagree... I think that offering alternate name space views to the existing {b,m}illions of v4 addressed spindles requires IPv6 reachability as well since those will also be adding IPv6 capabilities in the next year or two.
It's not that I think you only serve the future. It's that we think you are failing to recognize that IPv6 is now and that what is IPv4 today will be at least dual-stack tomorrow. > related, i've argue that new gtld registry operators in general do not > benefit from a manditory dnssec requirement, a position unpopular with dnssec > evangelicals and others who suppose that new gtld registry operators will > exist to serve ecommerce with sufficient generality, persistence, and volume > to make them more attractive targets for rational economic exploits than > existing, unsigned zones. > > for those not keeping track, icann's laundry list of mandatory to implements > includes v6 reachibility, and dnssec, shortly after the date of contract, so > significantly prior to the operator acquiring operational experience, and of > course, cctlds, and existing gtlds, are under no obligation to sign their > zones. > The latter part of that paragraph is an unfortunate artifact of a pre-existing contract without those requirements. I would expect those requirements to be added at contract renewal. > i don't think of these positions as "naysaing" either v6 or dnssec, just the > it-must-be-done-now claims of urgency and universality of some of the > respective advocates for "sensible stuff", who because they hold the right > opinion, inform icann's ssac. > I think that the requirements are reasonable and that it is unfortunate that they cannot be added to the existing GTLD contracts. Owen