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Since the implementation of the Internet
domain-name system in the 1980s, the specifications published
and implemented by the Internet community have not permitted labels
making up domain names to have trailing hyphens (e.g., "example-.com").
Througout this period, the specifications for the format of domain
names have been well-known throughout the Internet technical community.
They have been set forth in several RFCs, including RFC
1035 (published in 1987) and RFC
1123 (published in 1989). The commonly accepted specifications
are reflected in the functional
specification for the Shared Registry System, through which
competitive registrar services were introduced in the .com/.net/.org
top-level domains last year, which requires that labels end with
letters or digits, not hyphens.
In the past several weeks, however, over 800 domain names with
labels containing trailing hyphens were registered by mistake
in the .com/.net/.org registry. These names do not conform to
the the functional specification under which the .com/.net/.org
registry is operated. The registry software in use before January
3, 2000, however, permitted registrars to enter these malformatted
names into the registry, and some registrars' software similarly
failed to screen out requests to register these names. Promptly
upon learning that these names had been registered, the registry
operator (NSI-Registry)
revised the software to reject additional requests to register
names of this format.
ICANN supports these corrections to maintain the stability of the Internet. At the ICANN annual meeting on November 4, 1999, the ICANN Board approved a package of agreements among NSI, ICANN, the United States Department of Commerce, and the ICANN-accredited registrars. Those agreements require any names that are registered to comply with the format specified in the registry's functional specification. They also provide that those registering domain names must agree to cancellation of the registration in the event of a registry or registrar mistake, and in the case of every one of the trailing-hyphen names the registering party did in fact have such an agreement.
The use of domain names in this noncompliant format presents interoperability problems. The documented format is well-known throughout the Internet technical community. Among other things, domain names that violate this format have the potential of causing software written in reliance on these formats to malfunction, and several instances of actual malfunctions have been identified.
The U.S. Government's Statement of Policy on the Management of Internet Names and Addresses, 63 Fed. Reg. 31741 (June 10, 1998) (commonly known as the "White Paper") specifies that preserving the stability of the Internet should be the first priority of any DNS management system. A second principle that the White Paper states should guide DNS-management activities is the promotion of competition in the provision of registration services.
After consultation among ICANN, NSI-Registry, and the registrars involved, notices have been given to the registering parties that these names were accepted and registered by mistake and will be cancelled. These cancellations reflect implementation of longstanding policy, rather than adoption of any new policy. ICANN commends NSI-Registry and the registrars involved for working constructively within the competitive framework adopted at the March and November 1999 ICANN meetings to effectively and promptly address this challenge to Internet stability. This sort of commitment to stability and competition will continue and expand the many public benefits the Internet has brought.