.dk

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

.dk
DK Hostmaster
Introduced 1987
TLD type Country code top-level domain
Status Active
Registry DK Hostmaster
Sponsor Dansk Internet Forum
Intended use Entities connected with Flag of Denmark Denmark
Actual use Very popular in Denmark
Registration restrictions None
Structure Registrations permitted at second level
Documents Terms and conditions
Dispute policies Complaints
Website DK Hostmaster

.dk is the country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for Denmark.

The supervision of the .dk top-level domain, is handled exclusively by DK Hostmaster.

Any new .dk domain name has to be applied for via an approved registrator. Then the domain name applicant can ask the registrator to manage his domain name or do it directly with DK Hostmaster. Registrations of domain names with the characters æ, ø, å, ö, ä, ü, and/or é are also allowed. You can visit DK Hostmaster's homepage just by typing "nic.dk" in your browser.

Contents

[edit] History

The country code top-level domain .dk was created July 14, 1987 at ARPA Network Information Center, Stanford Research Institute (SRI-NIC). The Danish UNIX User Group (DKUUG) at Datalogisk Institut, Københavns Universitet (DIKU) received management of the .dk domain on the DK-net, at that time an informal name used for the UUCP network used at DIKU. The name DK-net (or DKnet) has been in use since at least 1986.

In mid 1988 DK-net was connected to the emerging DENet, the government-sponsored research network established in late 1987 now known as forskningsnettet, run and maintained by UNI-C.

In January 1989 DKUUG made a name agreement ("navneaftalen") with the coordinators of the three other networks currently working in Denmark, a national experimental X.400 net (EAN from University of British Columbia), EARN and DECnet, concerning the .dk domain. They agreed to share it, hiding from the users which network they were connected to, and nullifying the use of pseudo-domains like .uucp or second-level domains like gov.uk, thereby creating a practice that has been enforced ever since.

DKUUG established a separate organization named "DK Hostmaster" in 1991, to administrate the .dk domain, following the creation of WWW.

By early 1992 UNI-C via DENet (an acronym for "Danish Educational Network") serviced all the Universities in Denmark, and DIKU had no need for DK-net anymore. Thus DKUUG, with DK-net, moved to Symbion Science Park where they received their own international lines and started to lease these to companies, and modem connections to private consumers. The growing business quickly overshadowed the organization's own economy, forcing the creation of a separate company. In 1993, DK-net Aps, a genuine ISP and Denmark's first, was established as a limited liability company.

In 1996, with the establishment of the Danish Research Network, the name "DENet" was used for the commercial part of the network and changed to be an acronym for "Dansk Erhvervs Net", i.e. Danish Business Network.

[edit] Tele Danmark takes over

On February 15, 1996, DK-net Aps, including the .dk domain management (DK Hostmaster), was sold to Tele Danmark (now TDC) for 20 million DKK. Acknowledging the possible conflict of interest of a company (Tele Denmark) behind both a commercial ISP (DKnet A/S, now a stock company) and also in control of the .dk domain management (DK Hostmaster), a group of tele- and internet companies, 28 in all, including Telia, Global One, Deutsche Telekom, IBM, assembled five days after the purchase in order to gain control of the DK Hostmaster function.

Tele Danmark initially refused, and the group together formed the organisation Foreningen af Internetleverandører (FIL), and threatened to go directly to IANA to counter what they saw as a bona fide Tele Danmark monopoly. Tele Denmark agreed and FIL became the authority registered by IANA for the .dk domain, while the nominal and practical administration remained the responsibility of Dknet A/S. In June 1996 they signed a one-year contract about the practice and rules concerning the .dk domain, which would later be renewed for another year.

[edit] Race for the .dk domain

On January 15, 1997 at 15.00, FIL loosened the restrictions for registering a .dk domain name. Where one had previously needed a valid reason to register one, all restrictions were now removed, creating an unprecedented run on .dk domain names. By the end of 1996 there were only 6.500 registered .dk domains, by February 1, 1997 this had more than doubled and at the end of 1997 there were 41.000 registered .dk domains. This in turn created a series of legal actions, which would last well into the 2000s, not only against FIL’s own members, who was accused of using inside knowledge to register large amount of "good" domain names quickly, but also against individuals who were accused of cyber squatting.

In December 1997 Tele Danmark announced that from the beginning of 1998 they would start collecting a yearly fee (of 340 DKK ex moms) for every registered domain name, via DK Hostmaster. This caused a stir in FIL's members, as they had not been informed. While there had been talks about some sort of fee to DK Hostmaster to cover its expenses, no review of DK Hostmaster’s actual budget was available since it was financially all but a part of Tele Danmark. This was therefore seen by FIL as abuse of power and profit making via the supposedly non-profit DK Hostmaster organization. It was later revealed that it was the board of directors of FIL (later fired) that had granted Tele Danmark the right to set the price that they wanted, without asking its members.

As a consequence of this Tele Danmark announced in March of 1998 that the commercial parts in DK-net A/S was moved to Tele Denmark Internet and DK-net A/S, with its only remaining asset, DK Hostmaster, was renamed to "DK Hostmaster A/S", and put up for sale. Tele Danmark encouraged a larger forum or group comprising more than just telecom and internet companies (like FIL) to form and buy it, because the Internet now had a much broader appeal. This caused yet another stir in FIL who flat out rejected that Tele Denmark had the right to sell something it did not own.

[edit] DIFO takes over

In October 1998 FIL sent a letter to Tele Danmark ending the contract and agreement that had been signed back in June 1996 (renewed in 1997). The letter also stated that FIL wanted to take over the running of DK Hostmaster themselves. Tele Danmark denied that FIL could do this. In November 1998 FIL, on the invitation of the Danish Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation, called a meeting between all actors on the Danish internet, companies as well as users, under the banner "ID MoU" ("Internet Danmark Memorandum of Understanding") in order to establish a long-term agreement on the administration of the .dk domain. The result of "ID MoU" was that a number of institutions and organizations established a self-owning institution named Dansk INTERNET Forum (DIFO) on July 1, 1999, which with the help of external investment bought "DK Hostmaster A/S" in December 1999.

[edit] Oldest .dk domain

The oldest .dk domains still registered in DK Hostmaster's database, are the domains dkuug.dk, diku.dk, bk.dk, dde.dk, ibt.dk, ifad.dk, lego.dk, mainz.dk and nordita.dk which were all registered in 1987 when .dk was registered and the move away from UUCP slowly started.

[edit] Source

[edit] External links