Eric, > I expected you to cite both the rejection of Klingon, without mentioning > how much time was wasted on it, or Runic, Pharonic Egyptian, etc., and to > make a "scholarly defense" of doing Pharonic Egyptian. These are artifical > or dead languages. > > RFC 1591 flatly notices the operators of ccTLDs that they "have a duty to > serve the community." > > I don't think that means dorking with glyphs Egypt, or from the Yucatan > (although there are way more speakers of Mayan than of Pharonic Egyptian),
Something in the vicinity of 2,000,000 probably, but citing that fact is about as relevant (or irrelevant) as pointing out that there are approximately 60,000,000 Egyptians in Egypt, a significant number of whom are as interested in their cultural heritage of hieroglyphs as Mayans (and Mixe-Zoqueans and Aztecs and Zapotecs and ...) are interested in their cultural heritage of hieroglyphs. RFC 1591 also states: "3) The designated manager must be equitable to all groups in the domain that request domain names. This means that the same rules are applied to all requests, all requests must be processed in a non-discriminatory fashion, and academic and commercial (and other) users are treated on an equal basis." Once IDNs allow Unicode-based names, perhaps you might want to recuse yourself from service as a domain name manager for Sweden when the first academic group comes along requesting a domain name containing runes. --Ken
