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ICANN promises a world of domain names

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers has announced its plans to fast track the development of country-coded top level domains (ccTLDs) and local language scripting at the Internet Governance Forum in Rio de Janeiro.
Written by Marcus Browne, Contributor

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) has announced its plans to fast track the development of country-coded top level domains (ccTLDs) and local language scripting at the Internet Governance Forum in Rio de Janeiro yesterday.

ICANN, the worldwide not-for-profit organisation that regulates the Internet's domain name system (DNS) has launched its campaign to provide internationalised ccTLDs -- those that don't use Latin characters -- as soon as possible with the help of the country-code Names Supporting Organisation (ccNSO).

"A lot of hard work has been done on IDNs (Internationalised Domain Names) -- and there is a technical evaluation of their impact on the root zone going on as we speak," said Chris Disspain, ccNSO chairman in a statement.

"The next step is to develop the policies that will see the creation of new top-level domains in characters from the languages of the world," he said.

ICANN's board approved the establishment of an IDN working group at a meeting in Los Angeles earlier this month.

"The goal behind the fast-track process is to find a way to represent territory identifications in their local languages in operation as ccTLDs as quickly as possible," said Disspain.

He went on to say that the immediate goal in the process is to establish ccTLDs in the "areas of highest need" first, and to avoid any unnecessary impositions on the long-term plans for the full implementation of IDNs.

"This fast-track process will really be driven by those who want to take part and get their name in their language on their Internet in their country," he said.

The announcement comes less than a month after ICANN elected New Zealand lawyer Peter Dengate Thrush as its new chairman, replacing Internet pioneer Vint Cerf.

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