Authorised by the Internet Assigned Number Authority (IANA) in 1991, the
Croatian Academic and Research Network CARNet (further in the text CARNet)
as administrator of the top-level hr domain, and in accordance with the
provisions of the Decree issued by the Government of the Republic of Croatia
on the founding of the Croatian Academic and Research Network, CARNet
( Official Gazette No. 16/95) and the Statute of the Croatian Academic and
Research Network CARNet, the CARNet Board of Governors issued on 20 December
2000 the following
REGULATIONS
REGARDING ORGANISATION OF THE TOP-LEVEL"hr"
INTERNET DOMAIN AND THE PRINCIPLES OF MANAGING
THE TOP-LEVEL "hr" DOMAIN
CONTENTS
I INTRODUCTORY PROVISIONS - THE INTERNET DOMAINS AND THE TOP-LEVEL "HR" DOMAIN1
II TYPES OF DOMAINS WITHIN HR DOMAIN
III NAMES OF DOMAINS WITHIN HR DOMAIN
IV QUALIFIED REGISTRATION APPLICANTS DOMAIN USERS
V BODIES AND DOCUMENTS RELATED TO HR DOMAIN MANAGEMENT
VI DOMAIN REGISTRATION
VII RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES OF DOMAIN USERS AND THIRD INTERESTED PARTIES REGARDING DOMAIN USE
VIII HANDLING OF COMPLAINTS AND SETTLING DISPUTES
IX COSTS AND FEES RELATED TO HR DOMAIN MANAGEMENT
X TRANSITIONAL AND FINAL PROVISIONS
APPENDIX
Article 1
These Regulations deal with the issues of organising the top-level hr
Internet domain (further in the text HR domain), interrelations between
CARNet, as administrator of the HR domain, subdomain user in the HR domain
and possible third interested parties, rights and responsibilities of CARNet
and the subdomain users in the HR domain, as well as the principles of managing
HR domain.
I INTRODUCTORY PROVISIONS THE INTERNET DOMAINS AND THE TOP-LEVEL HR DOMAIN
Article 2
Individual parts of the global information space, individual computers or
individual persons are identified in the Internet by their names (e.g. URL
Uniform Resource Locator) or electronic address (e.g. e-mail address), and the
most important part of every such name or address is always the Internet domain.
All countries, networks and individuals linked to the Internet, including CARNet
by means of these Regulations, start from the principles and authorities related
to the organisation of the Internet domain system (DNS - Domain Name System),
which are based primarily on the following international (Internet) documents:
RFC 1591: Domain Name System Structure and Delegation
(URL: ftp://ftp.carnet.hr/pub/Internet/rfc/rfc1591.txt );
Bylaws for Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN)
(URL: http://www.icann.org/general/bylaws.htm );
IANA / ICANN TLD Delegation Practices Document - ICP-1
(URL: http://www.iana.org/cctld/icp1.htm or http://www.icann.org/icp/icp-1.htm ).
Article 3
The Internet domains are organised hierarchically. Within a certain domain,
subdomains are registered and activated, i.e. lower level domains. The domains
of the top (first) level are called top-level domains (TLD). Top-level domains
can be divided into three basic groups.
The majority of top-level domains are the so-called national domains
(ccTLD - country code domains, e.g. "us", "si", "de", "hr"), assigned to be
managed by concrete institutions within a given country, with the aim of making
these institutions responsible for the organisation and management of the
national domain Internet space. On the day these Regulations are issued, there
is only a minor number of the so-called generic top-level domains
(gTLD -generic domains), i.e. domains of international (geographically global)
type, e.g. com or org or top-level domains, historically related to big
national systems in the United States of America, e.g. edu or gov .
Article 4
HR domain is the national domain of the Republic of Croatia and it is the basic
element of the national wealth and sovereignty of the Republic of Croatia: it
is the basis of her identity in the virtual world and the starting point of
structuring, organising and presentating information in the information space
of the Republic of Croatia (RH) on the Internet.
Article 5
The basic right and need of every legal and natural person is the presence and
subsistence in the virtual world (cyberworld). This rights, needs and
responsibilities cannot be accomplished without the Internet domain. The
right to use one s own domain is one of the fundamental rights of legal and
natural persons. Article 6 Managing HR domain, as an element of national wealth,
as well as its use, represent high level of responsibility and respect of
interests of all the interested parties. Here, the interest of a community,
if clearly defined and accepted, has the advantage over the individual
interests of legal or natural persons. In this sense, these Regulations
determine the special rights of the government or local authorities in the
Republic of Croatia, related first of all to the registration of the so-called
generic domains, e.g. domains with names denoting fields of human activities
or geographic facilities in Croatia.
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