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- N-1-3-012.30.2, "DIGI - Forging Ahead in Germany", by Dave Morton*,
- <David.Morton@ECRC.DE>
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- DIGI e.V. - the German Internet users' group (Deutsche Interessen-
- gemeinschaft Internet e.V) has finally been legally constituted under
- German law. An unfortunate delay in the legal registration of the
- society was caused by an over zealous civil servant at the court who
- noticed that the required abbreviation "e.V" (i.e., society) was
- missing from our charter. This oversight has since been rectified and
- the registration court, to our relief, has finally declared DIGI a
- full legal entity.
-
- Since then, the DIGI e.V. office in Munich is being inundated with
- information and membership requests as well as with registrations for
- DIGI's first conference which will take place also in Munich between
- the 9-12 November 1992, in the Marriott Hotel. A number of prominent
- speakers from the US and Europe will be in attendance as well as many
- of the active members of the community from Germany itself. 26
- tutorials will also be held during the first two days and the demand
- for these indicates the growing interest and need for information in
- Germany concerning the Internet and Internet technology in general.
-
- DIGI has also been active in other areas as well, amongst others, with
- its proposal for the formation of a working commission to specify and
- publish a call for tender for the services of a DE-NIC. This has met
- with overwhelming support from almost all quarters of the user
- community. DIGI intends to make public the specifications, the call
- for tender, as well the guidelines for evaluation and acceptance.
- DIGI intends to ensure that a neutral instance of a DE-NIC is
- established so that stable operation of current DE-NIC can be
- continued for the benefit of the whole community.
-
- The current DE-NIC token holder, the University of Dortmund, is
- increasingly having to face the problem of an ever growing user
- community requiring DE-NIC support. The University alone cannot be
- expected to provide the required financial, manpower and other
- necessary resources to continue providing the service. The University
- receives no government support whatsoever for this activity and the
- work of the current DE-NIC has until now been carried out on a
- voluntary no cost basis for the whole of German Internet community.
- Starting January 1991, service providers DFN and EUnet provided
- funding for DE-NIC each for a limited period of time; but no sort of
- stable funding was agreed. This situation cannot continue
- indefinitely and therefore a solution was perceived to be urgently
- necessary. Thus the DIGI initiative to form the DE-NIC Commission in
- order to establish a solid DE-NIC on a sound financial basis for the
- future.
-
- On the initiative of DIGI, the three current service providers, DFN,
- EUnet and XLINK, have agreed to an interim financing model for 1992.
- This agreement was hammered out by DIGI officials and representatives
- of the service providers during the CeBIT Hannover Fair trade show in
- March of this year. A longer term solution was discussed as well.
- The financing model, called the "Hannover Model" is based on a points
- matrix of service providers and their customers, and thus a fair
- division of the costs based on the existing domains in Germany.
-
- The DE-NIC commission has since been established with a broad and open
- membership which foresees participation of the current DE-NIC token
- holder, the current service providers, representatives of the DFN/WiN
- planning group (i.e., the German X.25 R&D network), representatives of
- commercial (i.e., non-academic Internet participants), a
- representative of the RIPE NCC, as well as representatives of the DIGI
- board and the DIGI DE-NIC advisory council. The commission has met
- three times since its establishment at the beginning of July and much
- progress has been made in formulating both the technical details, but
- more importantly, the legal and administrative framework for the call
- for tender and for the eventual contract and implementation. A number
- of legal and financial hurdles will still need clarification and a
- formal handover of the DE-NIC token to DIGI e.V. will need to be
- negotiated as well. The commission will shortly be publishing the
- results of its deliberations. We expect to obtain valuable feedback
- from colleagues on the Internet which can then be fed back into fine
- tuning the process. We hope to report on the commission's progress in
- the next issue.
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- The DIGI DE-NIC commission is doing pioneering work in this problem
- area which our US colleagues are fortunate in not having to face. We
- believe that many other countries have or will shortly have similar
- problems with NICs and we hope very much that the work of the
- commission can help other countries as well in the proper and neutral
- organisation of their NICs.
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- *DIGI e.V./European Computer-Industry Research Centre
-