Should the Hong Kong SAR seize control of its country code top level domain ('ccTLD') to establish a "sovereign domain" in the manner described by Greg Hagen?
Title: Should the Hong Kong SAR seize control of its country code top level domain ('ccTLD') to establish a "sovereign domain" in the manner described by Greg Hagen?
Category: /History/Asian History
Details: Words: 1420 | Pages: 5 (approximately 235 words/page)
Should the Hong Kong SAR seize control of its country code top level domain ('ccTLD') to establish a "sovereign domain" in the manner described by Greg Hagen?
Category: /History/Asian History
Details: Words: 1420 | Pages: 5 (approximately 235 words/page)
Question 9.
I will answer this question first by briefly explaining the DNS structure and the present way in which it is being regulated. I will then outline the defects of the current system and then analyse some of the propositions that have been put forward in academic circles.
A domain name is simply an alphabetic representation of an IP address, which consists of a series of numbers. A domain name is more 'memorable' then an
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Laws and The Electronic Commerce Marketplace' 34 San Diego Law Review 1225.
2.Cundy v Lindsay (1878) 3 App Cas 459
3.Gregory R. Hagen, 'Sovereign Domain and Property Claims'.
4.Michael Froomkin, 'Wrong Turn in Cyberspace'.
5.Sarah Ferguson, 'The Village Voice: Features: Casting a Wider Net'.
6.Winn J (1998) 'Open Systems, Free Markets and Regulation of Internet Commerce' 72 Tulane Law Review.
7.Wu R, 'Electronic Transactions Ordinance - Building a Legal Framework for E-commerce in Hong Kong', 2000 (1)The Journal of Information, Law and Technology.