MediaFilter on Sat, 20 Jun 1998 09:09:19 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> Postel Goes Postal or is it Just .US? |
Will Postel go Postal when he starts working for the USPS? Apparently there is some behind closed doors dealmaking going on between the NTIA, IANA and the US Postal Service. Here is a copy of a proposal from the US Postal Service to take over the management of the .US country code toplevel domain: CONFIDENTIAL DRAFT USPS Coordination of the .us Domain May 8, 1998 Building on its legislative mandate to offer universal delivery while promoting commercial infrastructure development, the United States Postal Service (USPS) proposes to coordinate the development of the .us domain as a national addressing infrastructure. This coordinated framework for addressing will efficiently link physical and virtual space and accelerate and universalize the growth of electronic commerce. The Postal Service is working with the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) on the mapping of .us locality addresses to the postal address database. These street-level addresses under .us will provide a privacy-protected space which will allow US residents to define their own terms for electronic communications. In the interest of initiating widespread personal and commercial use of .us, the Postal Service is willing to commit additional resources to: _ engage the private sector in the development of credentialed, commerce-enabling space under .us _ promote classified business addressing under .us at local, state, and national levels as an open reference for public and private delivery systems and competing directory services _ manage an open policy process to develop policies for expanding the .us domain _ work toward the establishment of a governance structure that will represent the diversity of stakeholder interests - private, nonprofit, and public - in a fully developed .us domain space To these ends, the Postal Service specifically proposes to support the following functions: Current registry operations: Initially, provide funding for the IANA to continue its current operation of the .us TLD under contract to the USPS. With IANA, develop a transition plan that ensures a seamless and transparent continuation of existing DNS services within the .us TLD. Geopolitical addressing system: Refine conventions for Internet addressing of public agencies at the federal, state and local levels. Reassess the present system of private registrars. Second-level domain name structures: Seek input from Internet users regarding the creation of additional second-level domain name structures within the .us space, such as industry-sector/trademark-oriented structures or affinity group names. Explore options for delegating second-level domains to appropriate private-sector organizations. Policy development: Observe federal formalities to ensure that all stakeholders have an opportunity to participate. Establish advisory committees and work towards participatory governance. A National Addressing Infrastructure Unique among national Top-Level Domains, the geopolitical structure of .us has been populated largely by public agencies rather than private users. Ironically, the absence of unstructured commercial space under .us has preserved an opportunity to develop and exploit an ordered and secure space quite distinct from the flat, unstructured space of .com and other TLDs. Instead of simply serving as a mnemonic link to a company or product, domain names can serve a range of functions. A mail or server address in .us can provide assurance that a user is in fact physically within the United States. An address can represent that the site sells cars. It can be used to certify that its owner is a doctor, lawyer, or accountant in good standing. It can signify membership in the Better Business Bureau or warrant adherence to a code of privacy practice. It can bind the identity of a person with a certain level of confidence or subject to specified conditions. While the Postal Service is uniquely positioned to perform some of these functions, it is also uniquely able to initiate an addressing infrastructure open to development and use by a wide variety of private-sector companies, associations, and nonprofit organizations. As it is, the .us space lacks recognition as a commercial domain. The Postal Service can serve as an administrator for .us, bringing legitimacy, leverage, and scale to elicit investment by others and achieve critical mass. The Postal Service can brand .us as the universal domain for the United States by linking physical addresses and electronic addresses through residential and business .us addresses. Services designed to link electronic input to physical mail delivery are already being tested by the Postal Service. The Postal Service can combine legal protections and technology to ensure that users will be able to control the flow of commercial communications through a protected address. Having a secure address space will ease customers' concerns about privacy and security thus promoting more rapid acceptance of electronic commerce. The Postal Service processes 40 million requests for change of address from individuals, households, and businesses each year. This forwarding service has been expanded through a web site, MoversNet (http://www.usps.gov/moversnet/). Once security features have been added, the MoversNet site will enable customers to receive a .us address equivalent to their new physical address and choose among a variety of options for personal identification and attribution, controlled forwarding of information (from the .us address to existing email accounts) from government agencies and businesses at the new location, and new services offered by private sector firms such as electronic bill presentation and payment. The Postal Service could also assist in the development of classified domains into which businesses would voluntarily register and help make sure that similar classification practices apply at local, state, national, and international levels. Such classified domains could help mitigate the trademark problems that have been experienced in generic top- level domains. The Postal Service does not intend to enter the directory business but would be willing to engage the private sector in developing the classification system as well as policies for usage, delegation, and self-governance. Private directory publishers would have access to the classification system and associated databases and would build value-added directories on top of them. USPS Capabilities The US Postal Service is uniquely suited to coordinate the development of .us by virtue of its scale, universal reach and international relationships, its experience in policy formulation and implementation under public scrutiny, and its historic role in stimulating infrastructure investment. Its mandate to provide secure, private and universal access to personal and business correspondences and transactions enables it to administer a secure universal electronic address system within the .us space tied to the universal physical address system it maintains for all households, businesses, non-profit organizations and government entities in the U.S. Historical Role The Postal Reorganization Act of 1970 defines the mission of the USPS "to bind the Nation together through the personal, educational, literary, and business correspondence of the people." The Act further requires that the Postal Service offer services to every patron and every community within the United States. Throughout its history, the Postal Service has played a pivotal role in supporting the development of the infrastructure required to ensure universal delivery - from the development of post roads in the 18th Century to support for the aviation industry in this Century. Today, the Postal Service is the only organization that regularly serves every individual and business in the country by delivering 190 billion correspondences each year to every household and business in America. Trusted Public Agent As an independent establishment of the federal government, the USPS is owned by the people of the United States. It operates on a break-even basis, not for profit. It is subject to sunshine laws that require that its policies and strategies be shared with its stakeholders, the American public. The Federal Register Notice process provides an official vehicle for seeking comment from stakeholders regarding proposed USPS activities. Policies refined through this process have the force of law, publicly and legally binding the Postal Service to perform the activities defined in the Notice. Privacy As its mandate requires, the Postal Service has, throughout its history, vigilantly protected both the privacy of correspondences sent through the mail and the security of the mailboxes and post office boxes where these correspondences are delivered. As a federal entity, the Postal Service is also subject to the Privacy Act which requires that all customer records held by the institution be kept secure and private. Role of the Inspection Service The Postal Inspection Service investigates crimes under a variety of criminal statutes. This dedicated group of law enforcement personnel provides an important practical advantage in the investigation of crimes designed to undermine the integrity of postal systems. The Postal Inspection Service has an active and experienced computer forensic group to investigate and prosecute computer crimes. This technical expertise has been used extensively in investigations in which computers were used, including investigations involving activities on the Internet. Address Management Expertise The Postal Service's address management group manages the largest and most accurate physical address database in the world, maintaining 137 million addresses and processing address changes for 40 million households and businesses each year. The Postal Service works with the mailing industry to offer a number of electronic address information services to its customers. These systems, such as the Coding Accuracy Support System and the POSTNET Barcode Quality Certification process, allow the Postal Service to work with certified private sector providers to extend the reach of its address services. This certification process will be a valuable mechanism for ensuring broad involvement of private sector firms in the management of the .us domain space. Coordinating the physical address system and the .us domain space will enable the Postal Service to cross-link physical and electronic addresses in a manner that ensures the privacy of the parties involved. Information Systems Expertise The Postal Service currently manages a large information systems network. The USPS manages a class A license for IP addresses (56.X.X.X). Within the internal USPS network are 15 autonomous systems, with 16 areas each, which provide service to up to 34,000 local area networks. When fully deployed, the USPS internal network will provide TCP/IP connectivity to over 150,000 individual networked devices. Within the usps.gov second level domain, the USPS has one primary and sixteen secondary domain name servers which currently handle over 125,000 individual host names. Because of the high bandwidth demands of the digital image traffic used in mail sorting, USPS networks have a total capacity equivalent to over 700 T1 lines. Firewalls between the USPS intranet and the public Internet handle 1.5 million transactions per day at a peak rate of 140,000 transactions per hour, exchanging 14 GB of data in the form of web pages and files. In addition, the USPS, as a non-profit government enterprise, is able to obtain the best technical expertise available from private industry through consulting and contracting arrangements. The USPS organizational structure and supplier sourcing agreements currently in place can provide services within the existing .us TLD, and will scale readily to handle any growth in future demands. The United States Postal Service, the world's largest address manager and a public agency sensitive to policy concerns, is prepared to commit substantial resources to accelerate the development of .us as an enabling framework for electronic commerce. --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl