On Sun, Mar 12, 2017 at 12:10 PM, Jari Arkko <jari.ar...@piuha.net> wrote: > For what it is worth, reviewed these documents today > as an interested individual, and both seem to be OK > from my (very limited DNS expertise) perspective.
Thank you. > > Thanks for your work on this important space. > > I did have a few mostly editorial comments though. > > In sutld-ps, Section 3: > > There are several different types of names in the root of the > Domain Namespace: > > It would be beneficial to phrase this as a problem, as in what > issues the fact that there are different types causes. > > Also in the same section: > > The RFC 6761 process took more than ten years from > beginning to end > > Was name allocation part really 10x more than the rest of > the protocol development? I was not paying much > attention to the topic at the time, but I thought there > also other issues. Also in fairness, mentioning the > .onion process might be a more representative > sample. (But I’m not disputing the point of this > problem, it is real. Just wondering if we can be more > accurate about the description.) > > Finally, on -alt: For the record, and realising the > extensive discussion that the WG has had on > these topics, but I was a bit surprised by the > choices in -alt to not have a registry and to > use “alt” (which I associate with some Usenet > groups, showing my age). I’m quite fine with the > WG’s recommendations, however. I'm at another conference (ICANN) , so I'll keep this short. There was much discussion on the "registry or not" for .alt, and the discussion went back and forth, from a full IANA registry, to simply asking IANA to keep a list (basically FCFS), but consensus ended up coming down on the "we don't think the IETF / IANA should have a registry" side. The summary was that, if we *did* have a registry we would look a lot like a *real* TLD, and would end up with all of the issues surrounding that, like what do we do when Coke tries to register Pepsi, when someone tries to reserve RedCross.alt, when acme-anvils.alt is owned by Acme's competitor, etc -- and so we decided that "we" should avoid this craziness, and that various people would likely stand up list of things that they know about... As for the string, I came up with ALT as both an homage to USENIX days, and a shortened version of "alternative" -- we had notes in the draft for a while asking for alternatives ("not-dns" was proposed, but garnered no real feedback). The string needs to be short, easy to type, and shouldn't give people the impression that this is a "second class citizen" -- alt seems as good as any, and does make usenix people grin... W > > Jari > > > _______________________________________________ > DNSOP mailing list > DNSOP@ietf.org > https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/dnsop > -- I don't think the execution is relevant when it was obviously a bad idea in the first place. This is like putting rabid weasels in your pants, and later expressing regret at having chosen those particular rabid weasels and that pair of pants. ---maf _______________________________________________ DNSOP mailing list DNSOP@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/dnsop