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Re: [ga] Songbird in the BC?
On Wed, Oct 24, 2001 at 09:34:38PM -0400, DannyYounger@cs.com wrote:
> Jefsey, you indicated that Songbird recently became a member of the
> business constituency. The Songbird website
> http://songbird.com/songbird/index.html seems to indicate that the
> company is primarily an ISP.
ISP's, by the definition used in the ISP and BC constituency,
fundamentally provide internet connectivity to end users. Songbird does
not provide internet connectivity to anyone. Instead, Songbird's
services are limited to website hosting, design, development, and
consulting. Entities that provide these services are sometimes loosely
referred to as ISPs, because the term "ISP" is used differently by
different people. But as it is used in ICANN, Songbird is not an ISP.
(There is another term common in the business, "Internet Presence
Provider").
> How then can it be a full member of the BC
> instead of merely an admitted observer?
You could have figured this out yourself, but of course that would not
serve your purpose.
> BC Charter: "Legally recognized for-profit business enterprises that have
> been in business for less than one year and companies whose predominant
> business is to be a registry, a registrar or an ISP cannot have full
> membership status, but may become observers."
>
> I seems that Kent has developed the knack of being in a number of
> constituencies simultaneously while the rest of us remain unrepresented.
> Interesting.
Yes, it is interesting. It proves that the claims that you and others
make about being unrepresented are simply bogus noise. Anyone who
seriously wants to participate can do so.
--
Kent Crispin "Be good, and you will be
kent@songbird.com lonesome." -- Mark Twain
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