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Hi! Folks,<br><br>
Are you not getting bored repeating the same misreading for 14 years as
if you had discovered the hidden face of the moon? <br><br>
The second paragraph simplly says that users are able to be free and
there are intelligent ways not to be obliged to see what one does not
want to see. People are free to say what they want, and free not to
receive what the do not want.<br><br>
Please do your home work on this issue before showing yourself entirely
out of scope; One thing you can do is to read the ICANN authoritative
position on the matter.
<a href="http://www.icann.org/en/about/unique-authoritative-root" eudora="autourl">
http://www.icann.org/en/about/unique-authoritative-root</a>. If you want
to know more about the internet as it is and disucss it less as it is
not; <a href="http://caida.org/" eudora="autourl">http://caida.org</a>.
<br><br>
Sorry to be rough, but reading the same irrelevant thing for the 250th
time... obliges to respond the same thing for the 500th time to students
or readers who believe they discovered the visible face of the moon
:-)<br><br>
M G<br><br>
At 21:19 02/02/2014, Michele Neylon - Blacknight wrote:<br>
<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite="">The second paragraph sums it up
nicely <font face="Tahoma"></font></blockquote><br>
<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite=""><font face="Tahoma" size=2><b>
From:</b> discuss-bounces@1net.org [discuss-bounces@1net.org] on behalf
of Bob Omondi [omondibob@gmail.com]<br>
</font>This is what the IAB had to say about this in may 2000 (
<a href="http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2826.txt">
http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2826.txt</a> )<br><br>
"Summary <br><br>
"To remain a global network, the Internet requires the existence of
a globally unique public name space. The DNS name space is a hierarchical
name space derived from a single, globally unique root. This is a
technical constraint inherent in the design of the DNS. Therefore it is
not technically feasible for there to be more than one root in the public
DNS. That one root must be supported by a set of coordinated root servers
administered by a unique naming authority. <br>
"Put simply, deploying multiple public DNS roots would raise a very
strong possibility that users of different ISPs who click on the same
link on a web page could end up at different destinations, against the
will of the web page designers."</blockquote></body>
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