[96669] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: Interesting new dns failures
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Tim Franklin)
Mon May 21 11:27:27 2007
In-Reply-To: <Pine.GSO.4.58.0705211421470.8022@marvin.argfrp.us.uu.net>
Date: Mon, 21 May 2007 16:19:52 +0100 (BST)
From: "Tim Franklin" <tim@pelican.org>
To: nanog@merit.edu
Errors-To: owner-nanog@merit.edu
On Mon, May 21, 2007 3:26 pm, Chris L. Morrow wrote:
> There's an interesting read from NRIC about this problem: "Signposts on
> the information superhighway" I think it's called. Essentially no one
> aside from propeller-head folks understand that there is something aside
> from 'com' :( take, for example, discussions inside the company formerly
> known as uunet about email addresses: "Yes, you can email me at
> chris@uu.net", "uunet.com?", "no, uu.net", "uu.net.com?", "nope, just
> uu.net". Admittedly it was with sales/marketting folks, but still :(
To a great degree, there effectively stopped being anything outside .com
when there stopped being any distinction between who was eligable for
.com, .net or .org, and it just became a "credit card, please"
free-for-all.
I can't imagine anyone now registering a new .com and *not* registering
the corresponding .org and .net, making them pretty much pointless for new
registrations. It's only legacy domains, and occasional gap-finding in
legacy registrations, where the registrant isn't the same for all three.
> I wonder how the .de or .uk folks see things? Is the same true elsewhere?
.co.uk generally seems to be understood by UK folks. .org.uk tends to
cause a double-take. (The 'special' UK SLDs, like nhs.uk, are a maze of
twisty turny third-levels, all on different logic).
My email confuses people by being both a .org and too short - the general
public seems to expect either firstname.lastname@company.com or
some-long-random-attempt-to-sound-cool-with-numbers-because-100-other-people-had-the-same-idea@{yahoo,gmail}.com.