Once again: IDNA has received strong written objections from at least fifteen regular WG participants and _hundreds_ of other people. Here are some typical quotes from IDNA proponents explicitly refusing to take these objections into account: * ``Just protesting doesn't count, if an alternative or fix isn't included''; * ``the Chair's responsibility ... is to move work along ... discouraging discussion of problems ... for which realistic solutions ... have not been proposed''; * ``unless you have a TC/SC solution which you willing to contributed to the group, I consider this discussion closed''; * ``You have only repeated problems that we already knows. You have not demonstrated any solution which is technical possible now.'' These responses are all missing the point. When a user objects to IDNA, saying--for example---that IDNA will produce ``conflicts and chaos for Internet users of Han characters,'' you can't dismiss his objection by saying that you believe that the other proposals are even worse. As I commented before, the IETF procedures don't say ``It's okay to make an incredibly destructive modification to the Internet protocol suite if you have to _do something_.'' Until the IDN WG settles on a safe course of action, we will have to stick to the status quo. I also summarized why people are objecting to IDNA: ``IDNA will cause a tremendous amount of damage, including bounced email, web link failures, widespread user confusion, and massive costs---much higher than necessary---for software development and deployment.'' Crocker asserts that ``such false claims have been dealt with repeatedly.'' Let's go back to the videotape: * IDNA co-author Adam Costello claimed in an IDN message on Sun, 27 May 2001 21:30:52 +0000 that, under IDNA, ``nothing will actually break (mail will get through, web pages will load, etc).'' * After the IDN WG identified several serious interoperability problems in the IDNA architecture---the result being that mail would bounce, web links would fail, etc.---I challenged Costello's ``nothing will actually break'' claim. * In an IDN message on Thu, 19 Jul 2001 04:31:48 +0000, Costello admitted that IDNA _would_ break things, and that his previous claim was wrong: ``I overstated it. I was wrong. Sorry.'' (Naturally, he continued by saying that even more things would be broken by another proposal.) I recently asked a simple question about how IDNA is supposed to work, from a programmer's perspective: under UNIX, if LANG is en_US.UTF-8, should the MH/NMH ``show'' mail-displaying program convert names from the IDNA character set to UTF-8? Costello, aware that a ``yes'' answer would cause interoperability problems and that a ``no'' answer would mean that users see gobbledygook instead of non-ASCII glyphs, ignored the question. ---D. J. Bernstein, Associate Professor, Department of Mathematics, Statistics, and Computer Science, University of Illinois at Chicago