Aug. 14, 2012
8:44 p.m.
It should not be necessary, but I can provide examples of this and I bet everybody can.
Given that that US has controlled access to the root since the day the Internet started, they have always allowed countries such as Cuba, North Korea, and Iran to updated their TLD entries as desired, and the US has made it quite clear they're not giving up control of the root any time in the forseeable future, I'm having trouble imagining what a relevant example would be. ICANN's screwing around to get ccTLDs to sign MOUs with ICANN was just a side show, and as Eric noted, it's not going to happen again. R's, John