Domains & DNS: April 2007 Archives
There will be a general election in Ireland in the next few weeks and we'll all have to listen to the various politicians going on about how much they'll do for the Irish economy.
But do the politicians actually use Irish companies to provide them with services such as hosting and domain registration?
There's a thread over on boards.ie which is quite revealing.
It seems that Sinn Fein are the biggest offenders of the lot! They seem to be 100% hosted in the US (courtesy of Pair). So much for republicans?
This lack of support for Irish business was also mentioned here as well, and ties in with the GAA's total lack of support for Irish jobs.
Following on Verisign's price increase, Afilias are set to follow suit.
In a letter sent to ICANN a couple of days ago Roland LaPlante announced a planned price increase effective from October 15.
The annual fee will increase to $6.15
John mentions that the IEDR have finally done something about porn.ie and added it to the blocklist:
blacknight@siracusa:~$ whois porn.ie
% Rights restricted by copyright; http://www.domainregistry.ie/copyright.html
% Do not remove this notice
domain: porn.ie
descr: Forbidden
descr: Discretionary Applicant
descr: Discretionary Name
admin-c: IH4-IEDR
tech-c: IH4-IEDR
renewal: 12-April-2107
status: Active
nserver: ns0.domainregistry.ie
nserver: banba.domainregistry.ie
source: IEDR
person: IEDR Hostmaster
nic-hdl: IH4-IEDR
source: IEDR
I'd applied for the domain on several occasions over the past couple of years in protest against one of the IEDR's naming policies - see my previous posts:
Is the Irish Internet Prudish?
Irish Adult Content?
Hot Sexual Romps on the Irish Internet
Over a year has passed since I posted about Verisign's unique position in relation to .com and .net
Yesterday they announced the first price increases.
VeriSign announced that as of Oct. 15, 2007, the registry fee for .com domain names will increase from $6.00 to $6.42 and that the registry fee for .net domain names will increase, from $3.50 to $3.85. This will be the first registry fee increase for .com and .net since the fee structure was put in place by ICANN in 1999.The increases are not huge, but it should be interesting to see what some of the budget registrars do. At present several of them are selling .com to their resellers with incredibly tight margins. While other companies, such as eNom and Tucows seem to be able to offer high levels of service as their USP, the budget registrars seem to have been gaining market share on price alone. The last quarter of 2007 should see some interesting changes
The Irish Internet Association's website has been offline for most of today.
Why?
Well put simply the domain has vanished from DNS, so it's impossible for anyone to reach it.
The domain is held by Esat's nameservers, but at some point in the last 24 hours someone removed it completely from their nameservers and as the IEDR's offices are closed today there is no way to move the domain to another set of nameservers even as an interim measure (ie. there are no reloads or changes to the .ie zonefile today)
I spoke to the IIA's CEO Fergal O'Byrne a short time ago and he explained what had happened.
It transpires that the IIA have a free account with Esat, but that their billing department seems to have raised an invoice 4 years ago for services. Although the invoice was flagged as free and to be removed it obviously wasn't ...
End result being the site is offline due to a billing error.
I'm sure Fergal is very impressed!
IDN (internationalised domain names) was one of the hot topics at the last ICANN meeting in Lisbon.
In Lisbon the discussions were quite complex, as they were discussing the scope of IDN withing gTLDs ie. domains that are completely international in their nature.
When it comes to a ccTLD ie. one for a particular country a lot of the more "off the wall" topics can be safely ignored.
Ireland has two languages - English and Irish (Gaelic)
While the English language only has one or two accents, that are applied to "borrowed" words, the Irish language had several, though this has been reduced to one - the fada.
The humble fada can change the entire sound of a word (like most accents!), yet it is currently not possible to register a .ie domain using a fada.
My name in Irish is Mícheál O'Nialláin (or so I've been told), yet there is currently no way for me, or anyone else, to register the domain name while preserving the correct accents.
What of all the other Irish placenames?
Organisations?
People?
Wouldn't it be nice if you could make use of accents in your .ie domain?
Would people want it?
The ICANN blog features another series of tips and tricks to aid RegisterFly victims escape to sanity.

