Now I can see why nobody knew that it got changed. Thanks for the information. -ed -----Original Message----- From: Danny Younger [mailto:dannyyounger@yahoo.com] Sent: Monday, July 16, 2007 3:52 PM To: ediaz@prtc.net; 'Bret Fausett' Cc: 'NA Discuss' Subject: Re: [NA-Discuss] Re-delegation of the Puerto Rico ccTLD - .pr Eduardo, Re: administrative changes "IANA will check if a change request to a supporting organization reflects a change of administrative responsibility to a new organization that is essentially the same as the previous organization. Situations like this, called an "administrative redelegation", include where ccTLD management has shifted as the result of an internal restructure, internal governmental restructure, or the entity is renamed or wholly acquired by another entity. In such cases, to be considered an administrative redelegation, day-to-day operations would need to remain substantially unaltered. For example, there would normally need to be continuity of staff, policy, policy setting structure, levels of service and so on. When a request is determined to be an administrative redelegation, IANA will allow the applicant to bypass some of the elements of a regular redelegation, such as demonstrating local Internet community support and operational competencies. IANA will also implement the change without the requirement for the ICANN Board to decide the matter. If IANA considers an application to be eligible for this expedited treatment, it will advise the applicant." --- Eduardo Diaz <ediaz@prtc.net> wrote:
I think that there was more than a name change. It was a change of the administration to a different entity from one that was represented by the University of Puerto Rico (educational) to a new one represented by a non-profit corporation (commercial).
____________________________________________________________________________ ________ Looking for a deal? Find great prices on flights and hotels with Yahoo! FareChase. http://farechase.yahoo.com/