GENWiki

Premier IT Outsourcing and Support Services within the UK

User Tools

Site Tools


rfc:rfc2146

Network Working Group Federal Networking Council Request For Comments: 2146 May 1997 Category: Informational Obsoletes: 1816

               U.S. Government Internet Domain Names

Status of this Memo

 This memo provides information for the Internet community.  This memo
 does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of
 this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

 This memo provides an update and clarification to RFC 1816.  This
 document describes the registration policies for the top-level domain
 ".GOV".  The purpose of the domain is to provide naming conventions
 that identify US Federal government agencies in order to facilitate
 access to their electronic resources.  This memo provides guidance
 for registrations by Federal Agencies that avoids name duplication
 and facilitates responsiveness to the public.  It restricts
 registrations to coincide with the approved structure of the US
 government and the advice of its Chief Information Officers.  Two
 documents are recognized as constituting documentation on the US
 government structure: FIPS 95-1 provides a standard recognized
 structure into which domain registrations for .GOV and FED.US can
 fit; and, the US Government Manual [3], a special publication of the
 Federal Register, provides official documentation of the government
 structure. The latter document may be subject to more timely updates
 than the former.  Either document is suitable for determining which
 entities qualify for second-level domain registration within .GOV and
 FED.US.
 As a side effect, this RFC reduces the number of .GOV and FED.US
 level registrations and reduces the workload on the registration
 authority.  Previous versions of this document did not address the
 FED.US domain.  This document anticipates the migration of the .GOV
 domain into the FED.US domain, in keeping with common practice on the
 Internet today.

Federal Networking Council Informational [Page 1] RFC 2146 U.S. Government Internet Domain Names May 1997

U.S. GOVERNMENT INTERNET DOMAIN NAMES POLICY

 The .GOV domain is delegated from the root authority to the US
 Federal Networking Council.  The .GOV domain is for registration of
 US governmental entities on the federal level only.  Registrations
 for state and local governmental agencies shall be made under the .US
 domain in accordance with the policies for that domain.  Further
 references in this document to .GOV should be understood to apply to
 FED.US as well.  The most succinct form of the policy is "one agency,
 one name".  The agency may choose its own name, but an easily
 recognized acronym is suggested.  The following paragraphs enumerate
 the types of agencies eligible for registration and the types that
 are not eligible:
       1) The document "Codes for the Identification of Federal and
    Federally Assisted Organizations", FIPS 95-1 (or its successor)
    lists the official names of US Government agencies.  Either that
    document or the US Government Manual can be used to determine that
    an entity is eligible for registration as a second level domain of
    .GOV.
            A) Top-level entities (e.g., those in FIPS 95-1 with codes
       ending in 00 such a"1200 Department of Agriculture"), those in
       the US Government Manual listed as "Departments, Independent
       Establishments (not Corporations), and all the Boards,
       Commissions, and Committees"), and independent agencies and
       organizations (e.g., "National Science Foundation" and other
       non-indented listings unless prohibited below) as listed in
       this document are eligible for registration directly under
       .GOV.
            B) Cross-agency collaborative organizations (e.g.,
       "Federal Networking Council", "Information Infrastructure Task
       Force") are eligible for registration under .GOV upon
       presentation of the chartering document and are the only non-
       FIPS-listed or non-US-Government-Manual-listed organizations
       eligible for registration under .GOV.
            C) Subsidiary, non-autonomous components of top-level or
       other entities are not eligible for separate registration.
       International organizations listed in this document are NOT
       eligible for registration under .GOV.  Subsidiary components
       should register as third-level domains under their parent
       organization.  Other Federal entities may apply to the FED.US
       domain.

Federal Networking Council Informational [Page 2] RFC 2146 U.S. Government Internet Domain Names May 1997

            D) Organizations listed as "Federally Aided Organizations"
       in FIPS 95-1 are not eligible for registration under .GOV and
       should register under .ORG or other appropriate top-level
       domain that reflects their status.
            E) Organizations subsidiary to "Department of Defense"
       must register under the ".MIL" domain via the Defense Data
       Network Information Center - contact registrar@nic.ddn.mil.
            F) Other entities may be registered by request of a
       cognizant Chief Information Officer (CIO); CIO's are those
       agency officials designated by the agency head in accordance
       with the requirements of the Information Technology Management
       Reform Act of 1996 and Executive Order 13011.
            G) Federal Courts constitute a special class of domains.
       All Federal courts seeking domain registrations should contact
       the Administrative Office of the US Courts for their guidance
       on policy and naming.
          a) The string "SUPREME-COURT" is reserved for the Supreme
          Court domain.
          b) All other courts and their officers and officials should
          register in .USCOURTS.GOV.  The only standard exceptions to
          these rules are changes to governmental structure due to
          statutory, regulatory or executive directives not yet
          reflected in the above document.  The requesting agency
          should provide documentation in one of the above forms to
          request an exception.  Other requests for exception should
          be referred to the Federal Networking Council.
       2) A domain name should be derived from the official name for
    the organization (e.g., "USDA.Gov" or "AGRICULTURE.GOV".)  The
    registration shall be listed in the registration database under
    the official name (per FIPS 95-1 or US Government Manual) for the
    organization or under the name in the chartering document.
       3) Only ONE registration and delegation shall be made for the
    purpose of identifying an agency.  The .GOV registration authority
    shall provide registrations on a first-come first-served basis.
    It is an individual agency matter as to which portion of the
    agency is responsible for managing the domain space under a
    delegated agency domain.

Federal Networking Council Informational [Page 3] RFC 2146 U.S. Government Internet Domain Names May 1997

       4) Those agencies and entities that had multiple registrations
    under .GOV may retain them until August 1998, but sub-delegations
    will be permitted only under the one name chosen by the agency as
    its permanent name.  As of August 1996, the auxiliary domains will
    become un-delegated and will revert to the control of the .GOV
    owner.  As of 2 August 1997, all registrations in the auxiliary
    domains must be mirrored in the permanent domain and those names
    should be used where possible. At the three year point, all
    auxiliary domain registrations will be deleted (August 1998).
       5) Those agencies and entities already registered in .GOV but
    not listed in FIPS 95-1 (e.g., DOE labs, state entities) or the US
    Government Manual may retain their registration within the
    constraint of the single registration rule (see para 4).  No
    further non-listed registrations will be made.  State and local
    entities are strongly encouraged to re-register under .US, but
    this is not mandatory.

REFERENCES

    [1] Federal Information Processing Standards Publication 95-1
 (FIPS PUB 95-1), "Codes for the Identification of Federal and
 Federally Assisted Organizations", U.S. Department of Commerce,
 National Institute of Standards and Technology, January 4, 1993.
    [2] Postel, J., "Domain Name System Structure and Delegation", RFC
 1591, USC/Information Sciences Institute, March 1994.
    [3] US Government Manual,  Office of the Federal Register,
 National Archives and Records Administration, Washington DC 20804.

CLARIFICATION

  • Registrations prior to August 1995 are grand-fathered and do NOT

require re-registration with the exception of duplicate registrations

 for the SAME organization at the same level.  E.g., 2 registrations
 that represent the Department of Transportation would be considered
 duplicates.  Registrations for each of the Department of
 Transportation and the FAA would not.  (The FAA is an autonomous
 component contained within the DOT).
  • The policy requires resolution of all duplicate registrations by

August 1998.

Federal Networking Council Informational [Page 4] RFC 2146 U.S. Government Internet Domain Names May 1997

  • Local and state agencies registered under the ".GOV" domain may

remain there. However, they are strongly encouraged to transfer to

 the .US domain.
  • Cross-agency collaborative efforts may register under "FED.US"

as an alternative to asking for an exception to the .GOV policy.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS / ANSWERS

 EXISTING .GOV REGISTRATIONS
       Q.  What are examples of FIPS 95-1 Departments possessing
    duplicate top-level domain names, and what guidance has been given
    to them regarding these names?
       A.  Examples of FIPS 95-1 Departments with duplicate DNS'
    include "STATE.GOV" and "LABOR.GOV".  These departments had six
    months (until December 1996) to determine which name is permanent
    and which is auxiliary and three years to drop the auxiliary
    registration.
       Q.  Currently, our services are defined as www.cdc.gov,
    ftp.cdc.gov,  and gopher.cdc.gov.  Does this proposal mean that
    our names will now be: www.ntb.ops.cdc.phs.dhhs.gov, etc or at a
    minimum: www.cdc.phs.dhhs.gov, ftp.cdc.phs.dhhs.gov, and
    gopher.cdc.phs.dhhs.gov?
       A.  In the case of CDC, NIST, NIH, FDA, and the numerous other
    non-FIPS-95-1 agencies registered with ".GOV" domains, there will
    be no changes.  The existing DNS' of these agencies are grand-
    fathered under this policy.  In addition, the policy effects only
    the domains allowed to be registered directly under .GOV; further
    delegations are under the control of the sub-domain owner.  For
    the above, assuming the HHS sub-domain owner concurs, there is no
    problem with the HHS registering "cdc.dhhs.gov" as a sub-domain of
    "dhhs.gov".

Federal Networking Council Informational [Page 5] RFC 2146 U.S. Government Internet Domain Names May 1997

       Q.  How will registrations by Federal Laboratories be
    addressed?
       A. The existing domain names will be grand-fathered, i.e.,
    LBL.GOV.  Any new registrations will generally be within the
    domain of the sponsoring agency (and subject to agency policies),
    within the .US domain as a geographic entity, or within the FED.US
    domain.
       Q.  What are some examples of state government agencies
    registered under ".GOV" domain?  Will they need to change their
    DNS?
       A.  Examples of cities and states that originally registered
    under the .GOV include:  WA.GOV Department of Information
    Services, State of Washington LA.GOV Bureau of Sanitation, City of
    Los Angeles These entities are strongly encouraged to re-register
    in the .US domain but this is NOT mandatory.  No further state and
    local agencies will be registered under .GOV.
       Q.  It is not in anyone's best interest to name things by
    organizational boundaries as these things change. Internet domain
    names and host names, once defined and used, become so widely
    distributed that they become virtually impossible to change.
       A.  The policy does not require organizations to change their
    names once established, but individual agency policies may.  The
    DNS system contains some capabilities to assist in name transition
    - the CNAME record provides a capability for cross-domain aliases
    which can be used to ease a transition between one name space and
    another.  As noted in the clarifications, naming and sub-domain
    conventions WITHIN an agency or department DNS delegation are
    solely the province of that entity.

Federal Networking Council Informational [Page 6] RFC 2146 U.S. Government Internet Domain Names May 1997

       Q.  How can two entities have the same name registered?  How
    does this apply to NIH.GOV, FDA.GOV, and CDC.GOV, all of which are
    large components of DHHS/PHS?  NCIFCRF.GOV is a component of NIH.
    Does it have to change?  I don't understand how a distinction is
    made if some are grand-fathered and some are not.
      A. US-STATE.GOV and STATE.GOV for example.  The problem is
    actually one entity with two names.  NIH.GOV and FDA.GOV represent
    separate entities (albeit within DHHS).  If there were an NIH.GOV
    and an NIH-EAST.GOV for example, NIH would have to eliminate one
    of them (probably moving NIH-EAST.GOV to EAST.NIH.GOV).
       Q.  How much is the taxpayer being asked to spend to alter tens
    of thousands of existing computer and telecommunications systems
    to support this RFC?
       A. In August 1995 less that half-a-dozen duplicate DNS names at
    the FIPS 95-1 level needed to be changed.  Given the fact that
    this will be accomplished over three years, the costs should be
    minimal.
 CROSS-AGENCY COLLABORATIONS
       Q.  An organization maintains a domain name that represents a
    cross-agency community, IC.GOV, which represents members of the
    intelligence community.  As a cross-agency collaborative effort,
    does the domain have to be re-registered?
    A.  The policy states that "Cross-agency collaborative
    organizations (e.g., "Federal Networking Council", "Information
    Infrastructure Task Force") are eligible for registration under
    .GOV upon presentation of the chartering document and are the only
    non-listed (in either FIPS 95-1 or the US Government Manual)
    organizations eligible for registration under .GOV."  "IC.GOV"
    however, is grand-fathered since it is an existing domain.
    Nevertheless, it would be appropriate to provide a copy of the
    chartering document to the FNC for the record.  This would ease
    future changes to the IC.GOV domain if necessary.

Federal Networking Council Informational [Page 7] RFC 2146 U.S. Government Internet Domain Names May 1997

 FUTURE .GOV REGISTRATIONS
      Q.Top level domains are roughly equivalent to cabinet-level
    agencies identified in FIPS 95-1.  What will happen if non-FIPS
    95-1 entities apply for the ".GOV" registration in the future?
      A.  The registrar will use this RFC as guidance and will not
    grant the ".GOV" to any new entity which is not listed in the FIPS
    95-1 or the US Government Manual or which has not been granted an
    exception status by the FNC Executive Committee.
       Q.  Suppose NIH were moved to a new Dept. of Science?  Would
    our domain name have to be changed?
       A.  NIH.GOV is grand-fathered under the existing policy and
    would not change.  The "Department of Science" under its own
    policies may require you to re-register though.
 FNC INTENT
       Q.  It is unclear how this will policy will facilitate access
    by the public to our information, especially since most of the
    public doesn't know our organizational structure or that CDC is
    part of DHHS/PHS.
       A. The policy attempts to avoid confusion as an increasing
    number of entities register under the ".GOV" domain and to
    transfer authority and responsibility for domain name space to the
    appropriate agencies and away from a centralized authority.  For
    facilitating access, various tools and capabilities are coming
    into use on the Internet all the time.  Most of these tools
    provide a fairly strong search capability which should obviate
    most concerns of finding resources based on domain names.

Federal Networking Council Informational [Page 8] RFC 2146 U.S. Government Internet Domain Names May 1997

       Q.  Section 1D of this document unfairly constrains the
    organizations within the .GOV domain in stark contrast to Section
    1F that grants .MIL domain organizations full freedom to operate
    sub-domains in any manner chosen.
       A.  The Federal Networking Council has jurisdiction over the
    .GOV domain names; .MIL domain names fall within the jurisdiction
    of the Department of Defense.  The .MIL domain has had a written
    policy delimiting which DOD agencies get registered directly under
    .MIL since about 1987 when the DNS first started to come into use.
    Individual agencies under the .MIL domain (e.g., AF.MIL/US Air
    Force) are responsible for setting policy within their domains and
    for registrations within those domains.  This is exactly
    equivalent to the .GOV domain - an individual agency (e.g.,
    Treasury.GOV/Dept of Treasury) may and should set policy for sub-
    registrations within their domain.
       Q.  Section 1B identifies several law enforcement agencies as
    being "autonomous" for the purposes of domain registration.  What
    is the selection criteria for an "autonomous law enforcement"
    agency?  For instance, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is
    responsible for law enforcement as is the Bureau of Alcohol,
    Tobacco, and Firearms (ATF).
      A.  The selection criteria for "law enforcement agency" is based
    on primary mission.  A case could be made for either or both of
    these being law enforcement agencies, although the IRS' primary
    mission is tax revenue collection and has few armed officers
    relative to its size.  An "autonomous" agency is one with mission
    and role distinct and (possibly) separate from its containing
    department.  Unfortunately, FIPS 95-1 does not do a good job of
    identifying "autonomous" entities.  In the event of problems with
    registration, ask the registrar to get a ruling from the
    registration authority.
 ROUTING QUESTIONS
      Q.  How will Domain Name Service resolution on the Internet
    work?  Instead of a root DNS server returning the address of
    CDC.GOV and immediately directing inquires to our DNS servers,
    will the root server return a DNS pointer to DHHS, then DHHS will
    resolve to PHS, then a fourth DNS query to get to CDC?  This will
    add unnecessary traffic to the Net.  (example is the host
    CDC.PHS.DHHS.GOV)

Federal Networking Council Informational [Page 9] RFC 2146 U.S. Government Internet Domain Names May 1997

       A.  The answer is based on how you (personally and agency wide)
    configure your servers.  First, most servers cache previous
    answers - they may have to ask once, but generally remember the
    answer if they need it again. Information directly under .GOV will
    be fairly long-lived which substantially reduces the requirement
    to query .GOV server.  Secondly, multiple levels of the DNS tree
    MAY reside on the same server.  In the above example the
    information for DHHS.GOV, PHS.DHHS.GOV and CDC.PHS.DHHS.GOV could
    all reside on the same server.  Assuming the  location of the
    DHHS.GOV server was not cached, it would require two queries.
    Further queries would cache the location of this server and the
    servers associated with the domains it serves.  Lastly, the
    individual agencies may structure their domains as they please.
    CDC could reside directly under DHHS.GOV as CDC.DHHS.GOV subject
    to HHS's own policies.
 USING DNS FOR ADVERTISING SERVICES
       Q.  How can agencies utilize domain names for public service
    announcements such as regulatory information, health services,
    etc.?
      A.  The use of Domain Names for "advertising" is not encouraged,
    and there is no empirical data showing that Domain Names are
    effective for such purposes.  Moreover, while it may appear a
    reasonable assumption, we know of no evidence to show that using
    even commonly know agency, program or service names as domain
    names in fact, facilitates locating any particular program or
    service.  Indeed, we find it as reasonable to conclude that, by
    using freely available search engines, a user could locate
    responsive information before they would successfully "guess" the
    appropriate domain name. If the agency CIO deems it advisable to
    pursue "advertising via domain names," the agency should use WHOIS
    utility (e.g., whois EXAMPLE.COM or whois EXAMPLE.ORG) to
    determine if similar or conflicting names with other domains such
    as .COM or .ORG before proceeding.  Any advertising value may be
    lost if the same or similar names exist within more than one
    domain.

Federal Networking Council Informational [Page 10] RFC 2146 U.S. Government Internet Domain Names May 1997

 PREVENTING SIMILAR NAMES IN OTHER TOP-LEVEL DOMAINS
       Q:  Our agency spent a lot of time coming up with an intuitive
    domain name and now we find out that the same name exists in .COM
    and .ORG and is confusing to our customers, they don't know if it
    is really our site or not.  How can we prevent this use of our
    domain name?
       A.  The only practical way is to register your name in all
    available domains and hold them.  We say hold (do not use) them
    for the same reasons that you don't want your site spoofed --
    customer uncertainly as to whether they are in fact at a
    government site.  The implications of Federal agencies using other
    than .GOV or FED.US is a policy matter under the statutory
    authorities of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs of
    the Office of Management and Budget.  Agency  CIOs should consult
    with OMB prior to using domain names other than .GOV or .FED.US.
 THIRD-LEVEL DOMAINS:  CONTACTING THE SECOND-LEVEL DOMAIN
 ADMINISTRATOR.
       Q. I don't mind having a third-level domain registration, but
    my parent agency does not have a second level domain or does not
    provide third-level registration services.  What can I do?
      A.  In the first case, the registration authority can usually
    provide contact information for an appropriate second level
    domain.  If not, an exception may be granted by the registration
    authority.  In the second case, make sure that you contact the
    official administrative contact for the second level domain by
    using the information returned by the "whois" command, e.g. "whois
    STATE.GOV".  The domain administrators have the responsibility of
    providing third-level registration services. If an exception is
    granted because there is no appropriate second level domain, it
    will only be valid for two years after the subsequent
    establishment of an appropriate domain. After that time, the
    exception domain must register in the appropriate second-level
    domain.

Federal Networking Council Informational [Page 11] RFC 2146 U.S. Government Internet Domain Names May 1997

       Q.  What are the implications of using a name that conflicts
    with a .COM or other top-level domain?
      A.  When requesting exceptions to this policy, applicants should
    consider the limitations of the domain naming scheme.  Many common
    words and terms are already used in .COM, the largest TLD at this
    time, and it may be ineffective to use the same name in .GOV.
 US GOVERNMENT MANUAL
       Q. How can I get the US Government Manual?
       A.  Contact Superintendent of Documents
              P.O. Box 371954
              Pittsburgh, PA 15250-7954
    or see http://www.access/gpo.gov/su_docs and follow the links to
    US government information.

SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS

    The integrity of the information in the DNS databases and made
 available through network protocols is not reliable in the Internet
 environment without additional cryptographic controls or secure
 lines.  Agencies with secure internal network lines may be able to
 count on the internal naming information as accurate, but users on
 the Internet cannot.  The DNS system may be enhanced by the use of
 digital signatures on the provided information; as this software
 becomes available, .GOV SLD administrators are encouraged to use it
 provide a secure binding for the information associated with DNS
 names.

Author's Address

    Federal Networking Council
    4001 N. Fairfax Drive
    Arlington, VA 22203
    Phone: (703) 522-6410
    EMail: execdir@fnc.gov
    URL:  http://www.fnc.gov

Federal Networking Council Informational [Page 12]

/home/gen.uk/domains/wiki.gen.uk/public_html/data/pages/rfc/rfc2146.txt · Last modified: 1997/05/21 22:50 by 127.0.0.1

Donate Powered by PHP Valid HTML5 Valid CSS Driven by DokuWiki