• elicash 2 days ago

    > The IANA may fudge its own rules and allow .io to continue to exist.

    Important sentence (in second-to-last paragraph) that shouldn't get overlooked. Nobody has yet said it will be wound down. But this is an interesting piece and worth reading, regardless.

    • madars 2 days ago

      Exactly. You can still register new domains under .su, even though the evil empire hasn't existed since well before the web became popular, and both Russia and formerly occupied and now independent nations have their own TLDs now.

    • h2odragon 2 days ago

      10-3: https://domainincite.com/30395-future-of-io-domains-uncertai...

      I taglined it with ".io shit what now?"

      • petee 2 days ago

        Quite an interesting history read. I would think .io is popular enough right now that one of the majors would happily offer to absorb it, and the renewal fees that go with it

        Edit- i see now its already managed by Internet Computer Bureau

        • Arnt 2 days ago

          It effectively belongs to Identity Digital, the largest operator of top-level domains. I assume negotiations will shortly commence involving both Mauritius and ID.

        • ChrisArchitect 2 days ago

          IIRC after the big .io outage in 2017 arguably at the height of every startup under the sun using it for their fresh sites & services it was widely advised not to being using the ccTLD or any other one for business and project launches. This on top of the sketchy handover stuff that happened with the entity controlling it. The avalanche of new TLDs soon after took care of needs for many/the fad passed.

          • yieldcrv 2 days ago

            It can be resurrected with a crypto domain name service (a reference to the web 3 industry for cryptographers that are still pretending like context isn’t obvious). there are plenty now.

            since .io is already tech scene this one will be easy to resolve

            of course you can do it without crypto but since this will be baked into wallets that people already have as browser extensions it will actually work

            • fanf2 2 days ago

              I like Domainincite’s summary of how this kind of thing is handled https://domainincite.com/30406-five-times-icann-deleted-a-cc...

              The every.to description of how the decommissioning happens is not quite right: the TLD remains under the control of its existing registry. The registry will discuss the process with IANA but IANA are not directly involved until the TLD’s delegation is changed or deleted.

              The decommissioning won’t happen for 5 years (or maybe 10 if they get an extension). However, there might be a significant change much sooner. The registry that runs a ccTLD (country code top-level domain) does so by agreement between IANA and the government of the territory.

              Paul Kane / ICB took control of the ccTLDs of various small British oversees territories in the 1990s before it became obvious to non-geeks that they might be valuable, and the British government has not been bothered to do anything about this situation. The registries have since changed hands a few times and are now owned by a private equity firm.

              - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.io - https://icannwiki.org/.io

              It’s possible that Mauritius might decide they should take control of .io and run it until turnoff (if turnoff is necessary). They could move it to their own registry operator, or renegotiate the contract with the existing registry operator so that the profits go to Mauritius instead of the private equity firm.

              - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.mu - https://icannwiki.org/.mu

              Another detail that every.to is a bit vague about is who decides what country codes exist. Since the 1980s, IANA has deferred to ISO 3166. Its contents are determined by the ISO 3166 maintenance agency, which hews close to the UN’s determination of which entities are countries – their FAQ says they are stricter now than they were in the past.

              - https://www.iso.org/iso-3166-country-codes.html - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166

              I’ve seen some talk elsewhere that IANA might decide to reclassify .io as a non-ccTLD. That’s extremely unlikely, because it would imply diverging from ISO 3166, which implies IANA would have to take over the ISO 3166 MA’s job, at least for the DNS. It would also upset a lot of governments that really hate the way IANA and ICANN are established, and who think it should all be under the control of the ITU – and therefore the UN, not the USA. It’s a much more horrible can of worms than you might expect.

              So if .io is to continue longer than 5 or 10 years, I can see two possibilities.

              * Mauritius might decide to administer the Chagos islands as an overseas territory; with the agreement of the UN, and if it keeps an IO-ish name, it could remain in ISO 3166 as before. But this is unlikely because it contradicts Mauritius’s claim over the territory, so I believe it’s politically untenable.

              * Some kind of fudge is agreed between Mauritius / the UN / the ISO 3166 MA / the IANA, leading to IO being “exceptionally reserved”

              - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1_alpha-2#Exceptional...

              Ironically, one of the exceptional reservations is UK heh. (The UK’s official ISO 3166 code is GB.)

              Extra ironically, another is DG, Diego Garcia, the largest of the Chagos islands, which hosts a US military base which was the reason the British evicted all the Chagossians. (Wow my country has done a lot of genocides.)

              I wonder, could IANA request an exceptional reservation like the UPU has done for AC (and in the past the Channel Islands)? Or like the “certain telecoms installations” (does that mean NSA / GCHQ?) did for DG?

              Anyway, it will be interesting to see what happens. It mostly depends on what Mauritius decides to do.