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By Marguerite Reardon
Posted on ZDNet News: Jun 27, 2008 8:32:15 AM

At its meeting in Paris, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), a not-for-profit organization that oversees the naming scheme for web sites, voted to accept a proposal that will allow companies to purchase new top-level domain names ending in almost whatever suffix they choose.

So, for example, instead of being restricted to sites ending in .com or .org., eBay could have a site that ends in .ebay, or New York City could end its website address with .nyc.

The new naming process will begin in 2009. The first suffixes will probably be given to businesses and other major organizations. Countries are expected to keep their specific suffixes, but, as in the example above, cities could also get individualized URLs, such as .london or .chicago.

In an effort to deter cybersquatters, the organization is likely to charge a hefty price for the new names. Some experts have estimated that the new domain names could cost anywhere from $50,000 (£25,200) to $100,000 or more. ICANN plans to give companies with trademarked names priority for those names.

The group also voted to allow public comment on a proposal that would enable countries to use non-English script. For example, companies could use Chinese or Arabic script to identify their web sites.

Paul Twomey, chief executive of ICANN, told the BBC earlier this week that allowing the new naming conventions would create new "real estate" on the internet.

However, some experts have expressed concerns that the decision could result in a gold-rush mentality. While trademarked names will only be available to holders of those trademarks, there are many common words that people may want to register as web site suffixes, such as '.sex'.

The suffix .xxx was rejected by ICANN last year, but it could also prove to be a popular suffix under the more relaxed policy. However, Twomey told Agence France-Press that the organization will still try to block or reject any domain name that it deems inappropriate for security or moral reasons.

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  • Most Recent of 28 Talkback(s)
RE: '.wow': Solution Looking For a Problem
Adding more domain names is a solution that is looking for a problem. The ICANN announcment resulted in discussion and speculation. Is expansion supposed to solve trademark issues, brandability tangle... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Alex_Tajirian Posted on: 11/18/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Dangerous ground  Badgered | 06/27/08
Agreed  Timpraetor | 08/07/08
RE: '.wow': ICANN to allow almost any domain suffix  ZenMasta | 06/27/08
how would you do that?  BCF1968 | 06/28/08
Parents Doing the Parenting, About Time Someone Said It (NT)  steve@... | 08/07/08
I like that...  Linux Geek | 06/27/08
OMFG  EmenbladE | 06/27/08
Genius!  justit1234@... | 06/27/08
Seems that went over both of your heads...(nt)  storm14k | 06/27/08
Oh, he's something all right!  HypnoToad | 06/27/08
RE: '.wow': ICANN to allow almost any domain suffix  james.r.ewen@... | 06/27/08
um, why not just get rid of the suffixes completely?  PB_z | 06/27/08
Organization  jt@... | 07/05/08
wrong place...(nt)  storm14k | 06/27/08
Message has been deleted.  ZDNET_guest666 | 06/29/08
RE: '.wow': ICANN to allow almost any domain suffix  jamalystic | 06/30/08
RE: '.wow': ICANN to allow almost any domain suffix  Fredtuso | 06/30/08
RE: '.wow': ICANN to allow almost any domain suffix  Parassassin | 07/01/08
RE: '.wow': ICANN to allow almost any domain suffix  whiterussian | 07/02/08
Beyond Dangerous Ground  jt@... | 07/05/08
unequal access  dwilker22 | 07/05/08
RE: '.wow': ICANN to allow almost any domain suffix  cnstarzz | 07/05/08
re: nt  Synaptik/Chaos | 07/09/08
nt  Synaptik/Chaos | 07/09/08
RE: '.wow': ICANN to allow almost any domain suffix  Billsey | 08/07/08
RE: '.wow': ICANN to allow almost any domain suffix  rayday47 | 08/07/08
RE: '.wow': ICANN to allow almost any domain suffix  dtfan6degs@... | 08/07/08
RE: '.wow': Solution Looking For a Problem  Alex_Tajirian | 11/18/08

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