Dear John,
Thank you for your clarification!

Let me explain my understanding.

First, SMTPUTF8 MUAs already exist.
Second, if the registry provides this support, it implies that it can deal
with such addresses.
Third, it shouldn't be a big deal for the Registrar to use such MUA.
Fourth, the Registrant using SMTPUTF8 address also is capable of dealing
with it.

Sorry, I don't see where the chain is broken and communication becomes
impossible.

On Tue, Sep 13, 2022 at 9:04 PM John C Klensin <[email protected]> wrote:

> James,
>
> My apologies for not having responded to your note sooner.
> I've been preoccupied with several unrelated things.
>
> I greatly appreciate the changes to use an existing EPP
> extension framework and to correct the terminology error of EAI
> -> SMTPUTF8.   I agree that the more substantive SMTPUTF8
> technical issues should go back to the WG.
>
> However, in order that the discussion you suggest for IETF 115
> be useful and not just lead to another round of heated Last Call
> discussions, I think that, for the benefit of those who have
> been following the discussion closely and those who should have
> been, it is important to be clear about what the disagreement is
> about.  When you characterize the issue as "e-mail cardinality",
> it makes it sound, at least to me (maybe everyone in the WG has
> a better understanding) like this is some subtle technical
> matter.
>
> It really isn't.  The EAI WG was very clear during the
> development of the SMTPUTF8 standards that the biggest problems
> with non-ASCII email addresses were going to be with user agents
> (MUAs) (and, to some degree, with IMAP and POP servers that are
> often modeled as part of MUAs) and not with SMTP transport over
> the Internet.  Making an MUA tailored to one particular language
> and script (in addition to ASCII), or even a handful of them, is
> fairly easy.  Making one that can deal well with all possible
> SMTPUTF8 addresses is very difficult (some would claim
> impossible, at least without per-language, or
> per-language-group, plugins or equivalent).
>
> The implication of that problem is that, except with rather
> specific constraints, fallback all-ASCII addresses are
> important.  I'd be delighted to have a discussion about the
> types of constraints the would be needed, but every possibility
> involves a policy decision about DNS registration management and
> is hence out of IETF scope.  I claim didn't take the EAI WG to
> figure the need for fallback addresses out: it gets fairly easy
> as soon as someone thinks about, e.g., how their favorite MUA
> would manage addresses, and potentially error messages, that use
> a relatively complex writing system that has not been in active,
> non-scholarly, use for millennia.
>
> This is why, unless non-ASCII email addresses are used strictly
> within a particular writing system environment (and restricted
> to those writing systems), it is strongly recommended that an
> all-ASCII email address be available as a fallback.
>
> As we have discussed, I am not suggesting such an address be
> required in any particular transaction any more than you are
> suggesting that registries be required to accept non-ASCII email
> addresses at all.  Subject to whatever regulatory, contractual,
> or other constraints might apply, decisions about whether to
> allow (or encourage) such addresses, what constraints to impose
> on the scripts or domains that might be used in the addresses if
> any, and whether a all-ASCII address (or an all-ASCII local
> part) should be allowed or required in a particular transaction,
> is not a matter for the IETF.
>
> However, providing for the optional transmission of a non-ASCII
> address without providing for the optional transmission of an
> all-ASCII alternative is as much of a policy decision as trying
> to build rules about when non-ASCII addresses should be
> permitted would be.  If the IETF (or at least REGEXT) believe
> that it is a good idea to provide for non-ASCII addresses, let's
> do that right.  And "right" requires either provision for a an
> all-ASCII alternative or a globally agreed profile of what sorts
> of non-ASCII addresses are valid.  It is not the sort of thing
> that can reasonably be ignored or postponed for future work, at
> least without creating back-door policy decisions and/or
> interoperability problems, or the IETF is willing to standardize
> a protocol with known serious deficiencies on the assumption
> that those "details" can be worked out later.
>
> thanks,
>    john
>
>
> --On Wednesday, August 31, 2022 17:26 +0000 "Gould, James"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > John,
> >
> > draft-ietf-regext-epp-eai-16 was posted that addresses two of
> > the issues that you raised, by changing to use a
> > command-response extension, and to replace the EAI references
> > with SMTPUTF8.  I believe the remaining issue of the e-mail
> > cardinality needs to be brought back to the REGEXT working
> > group for discussion.  I've requested an agenda item at
> > IETF-115 for it and I encourage you to participate in the
> > meeting to discuss it first-hand if the agenda item is
> > accepted.
> >
> > Thank you for all your detailed feedback and discussion!
>
>
>

-- 
SY, Dmitry Belyavsky
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