Sure, why not?

But I get your point. Who are the people that have an interest in the
development or administration of a tool? Really, anyone who uses that tool
now, or might use it in the future.

With the DNS, that turns out to be, well, everyone.

David Schutt


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On Behalf Of Karl Auerbach
Sent: Wednesday, March 10, 1999 6:55 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [IFWP] Forming a NCDNC



> There was a definition of a domain holder floating around. It was anyone
> with administrative control of a zone file. (whether they did the actual
> editing or not)

Where I work we have a tool that lets people safely (one hopes) update the
company's zone file.  (Indeed, it is kind of a crude shared registry.)

Does this make me (and everyone else in the company) a domain name holder?

(I'd also note, that there is value in simply havng the potential, but not
necessarily actuated, ability to create or hold a domain name -- we don't
want to forget those folks.)

                --karl--

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