(sorry for cross posting)

 

For those interested in the Domain Name Collisions of New gTLDs.

 

Fahd

 

Sent: Wednesday, February 26, 2014 7:55 PM
Subject: ICANN News Alert -- Independent Report Maps Possible Way Forward in 
Mitigating Domain Name Collisions

 

 <http://www.icann.org/> ICANN


News Alert


http://www.icann.org/en/news/announcements/announcement-26feb14-en.htm

  _____  


Independent Report Maps Possible Way Forward in Mitigating Domain Name 
Collisions


26 February 2014

An independent report commissioned by ICANN, Mitigating the Risk of DNS 
Namespace Collisions, has offered a set of concrete recommendations on how to 
mitigate potential risks of domain name collisions.

Click here to download the full report » 
<http://www.icann.org/en/about/staff/security/ssr/name-collision-mitigation-26feb14-en.pdf>
  [PDF, 322 KB]

Click here to submit comments on the report » 
<http://www.icann.org/en/news/public-comment/name-collision-26feb14-en.htm> 

A name collision occurs when an attempt to resolve a name used in a private 
name space results in a query to the public Domain Name System (DNS).

"This report takes an in-depth look at the collision issue and the potential 
risks and impacts, and gives us some very clear advice aimed at how to help 
system operators detect and mitigate those risks," said Akram Atallah, 
President of ICANN's Global Domains Division. "The next step is to seek input 
from our community on the report's findings."

The report stressed that name collisions are nothing new and that any issues 
that arise from expansion of the Top-Level Domains (TLDs) under ICANN's New 
gTLD program would resemble those that occur in other parts of the DNS. But the 
report noted that expanding the number of TLDs will not fundamentally or 
significantly increase the risks of name collisions.

Specifically, the study outlines a set of recommendations on how ICANN and the 
TLD operators should handle the issue of name collisions in the expanding TLD 
space:

·         ICANN should require new TLD registries to implement and publish a 
120-day controlled interruption zone monitored by ICANN immediately upon 
delegation in the root zone.

o    After the 120-day period, there shall be no further collision-related 
restrictions on the TLD.

·         ICANN should have emergency response processes to analyze and act 
upon reported problems that present "clear and present danger to human life".

·         ICANN and others in the community should continue to collect and 
analyze data relating to the root servers and to the controlled interruption.

·         The Top-Level Domains .corp, .home and .mail should be permanently 
reserved.

The report is posted for public comment until April 21, 2014.

 

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