
At 04:03 PM 9/14/98 +0200, Jean-Christophe Praud wrote:
Richard J. Sexton wrote:
It seems to problem is more in ISO than in DNS... If France isn't happy with ccCodes, it should probably ask ISO for changes. If they are accepted, ccTLDs can be updated accordingly. Then, it will become a DNS issue...
This situation is common for many countries with oversea territories.
I am not sure I agree. The problem seems to be with IANA. Rather that figure out what is a country, IANA uses the ISO3661 list. Problem is,many things on that list are nor countries, so, IANA has to figure out what is a country. For example, what happens if somebody from Metropolitan France asks Jon Postel for the delegation for the .FX TLD. He may say "it's not a country" in which case he is deciding what is and what isn't a country or he may grant it which would certainly be bogus. -- "I think it is important to understand that distribution of authority is better than dictatorship, and that the governance of TLDs and domains in general should be distributed rather than centralized." - Paul Mockapetris -------- Logged at Mon Sep 14 17:41:57 MET DST 1998 ---------