Populate RDDS from SRS; Begin SRS and RDDS Operation Sample Clauses

Populate RDDS from SRS; Begin SRS and RDDS Operation. In keeping with customary practices for registries, the RDDS will be populated from the SRS system or will query the SRS system directly. Thus, RDDS operation must be operational no later than 24 hours following the activation of SRS and SRS must be operational no later than 72 hours following receipt of escrow data. Note that RDDS operation includes zone file availability to other EBEROs. The EPP interface to SRS must be protected by an SSL certificate, as described in the RFC 5734. Due to the tight deployment timelines, all EBEROs must either operate their own certificate authority to issue this certificate, or must use a certificate already issued to the EBERO prior to the EBERO Event. The recommended architecture for EBERO certificates is to either operate a certificate authority or to obtain a commercial wildcard certificate for the *.ebero.providerdomain namespace. There is no provision for additional time in the service levels to account for difficulties procuring encryption certificates. If the EBERO has control of ‘providerdomain’, then all TLDs transitioned to an EBERO should also operate with hostnames in the structure service-tld.ebero.providerdomain. Any certificates used to secure web-based RDDS or other registrant and end-user facing services, must be issued by a globally trusted certificate authority member of the CA/Browser Forum. These certificates may all function with the same wildcard certificate so long as it comes from a globally trusted certificate authority. The encryption certificate required for access to the EPP service must be issued to the canonical name of the SRS EPP service; however, that host name may be in names other than the TLD. Furthermore, because EPP implementation models differ widely across registry designs, the EPP (and other services directed and accessible only to registrars such as web-based control panels) may use any certificate authority (including internal ones) compatible with the EBERO’s SRS systems and selected by the EBERO. To conform to Specification 4 of the new gTLD registry agreement, host name ‘whois.nic.tld’ must resolve and be accessible over both IPv4 and IPv6. ‘whois.nic.tld’ must answer TCP/43 in conformance with RFC 3912 for Whois services, and must conform to standard HTTP behaviors at TCP/80. If nic.tld is not available (registered to an end-user instead of the failed registry operator), the EBERO and ICANN will agree on the domain where the service will be provided. However, whois.nic.tld...
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