technical accuracy (was Re: [NCSG-Discuss] [governance] RE: [bestbits] Rousseff & Cheha, etc.)

JFC Morfin jefsey at jefsey.com
Sat Oct 26 15:00:05 EDT 2013


On 19:47 26/10/2013, David Conrad said:
>[cc and subject lines cleaned up]
>
>JFC,
>
>On Oct 25, 2013, at 9:34 AM, JFC Morfin <jefsey at jefsey.com> wrote:
> > In order to have a chance of success that "Technical Coalition" 
> strategy has to be inclusive both technically and conceptually. 
> Your responses show that it is not.
>My responses show that I take issue with technical inaccuracy, nothing more.

The issue was just to know about the cooperation desire of the 
Technical Community coalition with the rest of the stakeholders. In 
order to know if  we are confronted to a positive precautionary move 
or to a negative power grab.

>Well, OK, that and I personally find it discourteous to folks who 
>might not be fully comfortable in English to make up words and play 
>silly word games.

Well, you are welcome to make up the English missing terms in more 
civilized/advanced languages ... Personnaly I find "wholization" 
accurate but awfull.

> > For you the internet root is the unique reference point of the 
> universe instead of being one of the 65,635 windows for the 
> universe on the Internet DNS (RFC 1035).
>For me (and I believe most people), the Internet root is the unique 
>reference point to the common namespace used in resolving names on 
>the Internet via the DNS protocol suite.

Yes this is what I understand you presume. Since you are all for 
accuracy this means that these "most people" will not raise normative 
contradiction. A good news for the rest of us.

>Also, I do not equate the Internet with the universe.

We were talking of the digital naming roots. Internet is not concerned.

What you taught me is that even when discussing in English with 
someone who has been in charge and who takes issue with technical 
inaccuracy it is better to detail the things in a non-internet 
language. I mean that when two systems are to interface and be 
compatible togther one can try the courtesy to use the words and the 
language of the other side to simplify their task. From your 
response, I gather that on this specific issue, we should not proceed 
that way.

We would probably be better in using the ITU or the JTC1 first, 
rather than trying to jointly propose with IETF. This might be a very 
precious tip. Thank you!

> > 2. I talked of the INTLFILE as the open repository of the roots 
> of the human digital names and numbers. You doubted it because the 
> authors of its IANA abstract did not acknowledge the names of those 
> who selected the labels they used.
>
>Well, no. I expressed surprise that there was no reference by the 
>authors of the DNS specifications to your and your colleagues work 
>since it would comprise a core component of the DNS namespace and 
>according to you it pre-dated the DNS specifications by nearly a 
>decade. Next time I meet up with Paul Mockapetris, I'm planning on 
>asking him about it -- I've always  been a bit curious how the 
>initial set of TLDs (other than .ARPA -- that one is obvious) were chosen.

The test to know if the guy you talk to knows about the story is to 
ask him "why .uk"?

> >> When someone asserts "This why they designed the DNS to support 
> 35,635 roots." I feel a need to comment.
> > RFC 1035, ICANN ICP/3.
>I am reasonably familiar with both RFC 1035 (having written a couple 
>of partial implementations of the DNS) and ICP-3.  I guess I'm not 
>bright enough to derive how either of those documents lead to a view 
>that the DNS was designed to support 35,635 roots.

As having made several roots being test operated on the Internet for 
18 months (dot-root community project) in order to investgate the 
reliabilty running different roots and no root servers, I can tell 
you that this is not rocket science: just to use Bind files as per 
the documentation. ITU even commissionned one of us (unfortunately 
deceased during the study) to report them how they could replace 
ICANN. Multiple roots are documented as a possible future, even for 
the Internet, by ICP/3.

If you want sometimes discuss this technically (no "open-root" fuss 
please) and the open-code DNS extension plan, you are most welcome. 
Unfortunately the dot-root report is in French.
BTW you probably know this: 
http://www.icann.org/en/news/announcements/announcement-3-23oct13-en.htm

jfc









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