Hi Jim, On 14/11/18 10:54 , Jim Reid wrote:
On 18 Nov 2014, at 08:22, Romeo Zwart <romeo.zwart@ripe.net> wrote:
There was an explicit suggestion on the list about using ripe.int as a 'lever' to get .int signed, hence my comment.
I think you are mistaken Romeo. Peter asked some meta issues on policy and procedural matters around the signing of .int: ie who is the governing body for the TLD and needs to be done to get them to sign it. He did not ask for the TLD to be signed. AFAICT nobody on the list has explicitly asked to get .int signed.
My wording was inaccurate. There indeed were questions on the list about procedure to have .int signed and that is what I intended to say.
Anyways, this is somewhat off-point. Although it would be good to know the answer to those questions, it belongs in another thread.
We are in violent agreement here.
Could we please return to the matter at hand:
I noticed that, meanwhile, you have read my other post. So, for the below questions, please see my previous post, where I tried to answer these points. As I tried to indicate, and you also pointed out yourself, there are some points here on which the WG should find consensus. We are happy to proceed when there is a clear working group direction. Kind regards, Romeo
[1] What DNS/web/whatever traffic goes to ripen.cc? If it's low, can this be killed? When?
[2] When was the utility of its DLV entry last assessed? What's the exit strategy for that? How often does its DLV name get validated and by whom/what?
[3] What DNS/web/whatever traffic goes to ripe.int? If it's low, can this be killed? When?
[4] When was the utility of its DLV entry last assessed? What's the exit strategy for that? How often does its DLV name get validated and by whom/what?
[5] What's the NCC's overall exit strategy for DLV?
FWIW I have still not seen any valid reason or meaningful daya explaining why the NCC still uses DLV.