-fictional and artificial scripts has been established by John Cowan,
-<cowan@ccil.org>. The ConScript Unicode Registry is accessible at
-http://locke.ccil.org/~cowan/csur/; the ranges used fall at the bottom
-of the End User Zone and can hence not be normatively assigned, but it
-is recommended that people who wish to encode fictional scripts use
-these codes, in the interest of interoperability. For Klingon, CSUR
-has adopted the Linux encoding.
-
- H. Peter Anvin <hpa@zytor.com>
+fictional and artificial scripts has been established by John Cowan
+<jcowan@reutershealth.com> and Michael Everson <everson@evertype.com>.
+The ConScript Unicode Registry is accessible at:
+
+ http://www.evertype.com/standards/csur/
+
+The ranges used fall at the low end of the End User Zone and can hence
+not be normatively assigned, but it is recommended that people who
+wish to encode fictional scripts use these codes, in the interest of
+interoperability. For Klingon, CSUR has adopted the Linux encoding.
+The CSUR people are driving adding Tengwar and Cirth into Unicode
+Plane 1; the addition of Klingon to Unicode Plane 1 has been rejected
+and so the above encoding remains official.