IDN News
All news is about Internationalized Domain Names that are from Internet.
ICANN takes a very big small step
2007-11-15 17:45:43ICANN took a small, but incredibly important, step on Tuesday, announcing at the Internet Governance Forum that they are fast-tracking internationalized country code top-level domains and starting experiments to test support of these names. The hope is that it will soon be possible to visit sites like 北京大学.中国 (Peking University dot China) and not just http://北京大学.cn.
I realize this seems like a small change to most of my readers, but those who are bilingual in languages that use a different script from roman characters likely realize the importance. It’s more convenient to type URLs in a single script than changing between scripts. (For my monolingual American readers, imagine typing .公司 for all your .com domains for a day and see how you like it.)
The symbolic importance is more relevant. The fact that top-level domains have been supported only in roman characters is a reminder to non-English speaking net users that the Internet developed first as a US network and that domain name issues were under control of a US company appointed by the US Department of Commerce before ICANN took things over. It’s an issue that comes up in any international discussion of internet governance when people are looking for arguments that ICANN is too US-focused and that the net hasn’t been fully internationalized.
While I’m not hugely sympathetic to these arguments - ICANN has worked really, really hard to invite public participation as Joi Ito points out in this blog post reflecting on his term as a board member, and much criticism of ICANN is uninformed or unfair. But there’s been a real concern in some technical circles that dissatisfaction with ICANN’s handling of internationalized domain names could lead to a split in the root.
Specifically, experiments to add support for .中国, .公司 and .网络 domains to Chinese nameservers suggested the possibility that Chinese ISPs might run root servers that would support these new TLDs, while the rest of the Internet couldn’t use these names without accessing those Chinese root servers. A nightmare scenario that arose out of this idea is that those Chinese DNS servers could stop syncing with the rest of the global domain name system, which might mean that google.com could resolve to a different IP address on a Chinese DNS server than on a Japanese or American one. Steven Murdoch ran some interesting experiments demonstrating how these new names would work and speculating on what a split root might mean.
If ICANN is able to support top-level domains in Chinese, Arabic, Persian and other languages, it may go a long way towards smoothing feathers, and could help prevent a dramatic split where it really is no longer possible to talk about “the internet”… a world where competing nameservers in different nations leave us talking about “internets”.
ICANN to Fast Track Internationalized Domains
2007-11-15 17:43:50 "Domain Names, which are currently mainly limited to characters from the Latin or Roman scripts, are seen as an important element in enabling the multilingualization of the Internet, reflecting the diverse and growing language needs of all users. . . .Thanks to ICANN’s evaluation of Internationalized Domain Names, Internet users around the globe can now access wiki pages with the domain name "example.test" in the 11 test languages — Arabic, Persian, Chinese (simplified and traditional), Russian, Hindi, Greek, Korean, Yiddish, Japanese and Tamil. The wikis will allow Internet users to establish their own sub pages with their own names in their own language; one suggestion is: example.test/yourname." See
Same thing holds true for ccTLD's; see http://www.icann.org/announcements/announcement-13nov07.htm.
This means that at some point an Internet user in China could type in a domain name using Chinese characters for both the top- and second-level domain names. Cool!
ASAP: Internationalized Country Code Top-Level Domains
2007-11-15 17:39:34ASAP: Internationalized Country Code Top-Level Domains
ICANN holding briefing on IDN ccTLD fast-track process at Internet Governance Forum
13 November 2007
RIO DE JANEIRO: Getting country-code Top Level Domains up and running in scripts from local languages through a fast-track process will be explained at an information session being held at the Internet Governance Forum this Wednesday in Rio.
The session, put on by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers and the Country Code Names Supporting Organization (ccNSO), will provide interested governments and Internet communities with information on the work being done to get Internationalized ccTLDs — the part of the domain name after the dot — up and running as quickly as possible.
"A lot of hard work has been done on IDNs — and there is a technical evaluation of their impact on the root zone going on as we speak. 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," said Chris Disspain, ccNSO chair. "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 in the areas of highest need, without impacting the long term policy process for the full implementation of IDNs across the globe."
The idea of an Internationalized Domain Names (IDNC) working group was put forward by the ccNSO council and approved by ICANN’s board at the Los Angeles meeting that wrapped up earlier this month.
Details on the session:
Date: Wednesday 14 November 2007
Time: 10:30 am to noon
Location: Imperial Room
"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," Disspain added.
About ICANN:
ICANN is responsible for the global coordination of the Internet's system of unique identifiers like domain names (like .org, .museum and country codes like .uk) and the addresses used in a variety of Internet protocols that help computers reach each other over the Internet. Careful management of these resources is vital to the Internet's operation, so ICANN's global stakeholders meet regularly to develop policies that ensure the Internet's ongoing security and stability. ICANN is an internationally organized, public benefit non-profit company. For more information please visit: www.icann.org.
Media Contacts:
Jason Keenan
Media Adviser, ICANN
Mobile : +1 310 382 4004
E: jason.keenan@icann.org
International: Andrew Robertson
Edelman (London)
Ph: +44 7921 588 770
E: andrew.robertson@edelman.com
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