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Re: [ga] Chinese Internet
Somebody, I'm not sure who, asked about Chinese alternative roots. In fact I
have supplied that information already (see below). I would also draw the
following post to your attention.
On Monday, April 16, 2001 10:21 AM (AEST), Bradley D. Thornton wrote:
Subject: RE: [minc-discuss] Looking for meat and potatoes...
> We're having problems with the CNNIC's TLDs right now, as they no longer
> seem to be functioning on our servers (resolving properly). If anyone has
> the neccessary glue records for CNNIC's new TLDs this would really be
> appreciated - again, The A and NS RRs are al that we need.
----- Original Message -----
From: Patrick Corliss <patrick@quad.net.au>
To: Sandy Harris <sandy@storm.ca>
Cc: [GA] <ga@dnso.org>; Kristy McKee <k@widgital.com>
Sent: Tuesday, April 17, 2001 5:59 AM
Subject: [ga] Chinese Internet
On Tuesday, April 17, 2001 5:27 AM (AEST)
Sandy Harris <sandy@storm.ca> wrote:
Subject: Re: [ga] Re: iCANN's protection
> Kristy McKee wrote:
> > China, among others has no interest in using the legacy root services.
>
> Have you any evidence for this? It seems to me .cn is in the root zone, and
> I fairly often see Chinese sending to various mailing lists I'm on. All of
> them are (surprise!) hosted on real domains whose TLDs are in the ICANN
> root. The Chinese I see there seem to have no problem finding those
domains.
CHINESE DOMAIN NAME SYSTEM LAUNCHES ON ALTERNATIVE ROOT SERVER
New York, NY February 7, 2001 (ICB TOLL FREE NEWS) People's Daily reports that
China Internet Network Information Center (CNNIC) has launched its Chinese
Domain Name System.
Internet surfers can also access other websites that do not end with ".cn" by
entering Chinese characters, so long as they have installed client software
provided by CNNIC, states the report.
Significantly, the "client software" referenced above means that CNNIC's
Chinese Domain Name System is using an alternate root server - an inclusive
name space root that operates in the same manner, but independently of the
U.S./DoC root system.
Users of ISPs that have installed the Chinese domain name resolving software
need not resort to installing the client software of their own. Many ISPs
regard the resolve function as a kind of value-added service, so they are
actively cooperating with CNNIC to promote and popularize this service.
CNNIC will provide three kinds of code formats for each domain name including
GBK, BIG5, UTF8 which are respectively used by Chinese mainland, Hong Kong &
Taiwan and Win2K users. Internet users can use their local code format
conveniently and there is no need to convert characters. This will undoubtedly
help lay a good foundation for interchanges between the motherland, Hong Kong
and Taiwan.
Regards
Patrick Corliss
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