Enjoy unlimited access to all forum features for FREE! Optional upgrade available for extra perks.
Sedo

Singapore - ICAAN Approves ".COM" IDN GTLD After 10 Year Hold.

Status
Not open for further replies.

GO1

Level 4
Legacy Platinum Member
Joined
May 13, 2010
Messages
183
Reaction score
2
Instead of delivering working domain solutions during the past 10 years,
ICANN has provided IDN owners with countless lists of upcoming implementation dates
which were presented by smoking hot women with really nice breasts.

This corporate business strategy changes today in Signapore as ICANN has finally
approved the release of the ".COM" gtld in native or (IDN) Languages starting in 2012.

I just wanted to congratulate all IDN owners (friend or foe) who have held thier IDN's for past
ten years or so, and wish them the best during the upcoming feeding frenzy.

At this time no forum member can accurately predict the future valuation of
key IDN's - but here's hoping we see some new IDN millionaires pop up.

I would also like to thank and congratulate ICANN for successfully navigating
a technical and political minefield during the past ten years.

In case anyone is still skeptical about the future value of IDN's, here's a
Youtube video showing the lunchtime festivities from the Signapore Conference taped
earlier today. Hopefully this too may help you realize the true
investment potential of IDN's.

Congratulations To All!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sFacWGBJ_cs
 
Last edited:
Dynadot - Expired Domain Auctions

GO1

Level 4
Legacy Platinum Member
Joined
May 13, 2010
Messages
183
Reaction score
2
Perhaps you're still transfixed by those smoking hot breasts?

It's time to let go of those breasts and fast forward to a new set.


* Inside Sources Say Better IDN Breast Are On The Way!

These new replacement breast are designed to be 'softer' more 'realistic'

and 'bouncier' than previous breasts and will provide IDN speculators with

a new look and feel that should make it easier for everyone to grasp and comprehend

- or cling to should they prefer.

Here's the reaction from one lucky user to an early private showing of the new IDN Breasts following a recent sporting event.
 
Last edited:

bwhhisc

Level 7
Legacy Platinum Member
Joined
Nov 24, 2005
Messages
989
Reaction score
17
As reported at 6:45 a.m. EST. by Reuters.....I think it is now official. ;)
Not mentioned but the BIG news for most is this paves the way for IDN.IDN with .com, .net, .jp etc to have those gtlds and cctlds in native scripts. Holders of idn.com, idn.net, etc will have the rights to idn.idn versions.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/us_internet_names

Not only .coms as Internet body throws open domain names.

Fox News By Raju Gopalakrishnan– 2 hrs 37 mins ago

SINGAPORE (Reuters) People and companies will be able to set up a website with almost any address by the end of next year if they have a legitimate claim to the domain name and can pay a hefty fee.

The Internet body that oversees domain names voted on Monday to end restricting them to suffixes like .com or .gov and will receive applications for new names from January 12 next year with the first approvals likely by the end of 2012.

And they can be in any characters -- Cyrillic, Kanji or Devanagari for instance, for users of Russian, Japanese and Hindi.

"It's the biggest change I think we have seen on the Internet," Peter Dengate Thrush, chairman of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), told reporters.

"We have provided a platform for the next generation of creativity and inspiration."

The new gTLD, or generic top-level domain, program was approved by 13 votes to one with two abstentions by the board of ICANN at a meeting in Singapore.

The sole opposition came from a member who felt that more time was needed to hold discussions with government and others parties, ICANN officials said.

The new names could infringe on social and religious sensitivities, for instance if someone wanted to set up a .nazi domain, said Dengate Thrush.

And people who have invested in securing lucrative .com domains will find the value of the holdings diluted by the new rules, he added.

Thrashing out the rules and overcoming objections has taken years, ICANN officials said.

For instance, while the new steep charges of $185,000 to apply for a domain name could deter cyber-squatters, companies with well known trademarks worry that they may have to contend with series of copycat names like coke.paris or google.zambia.

ICANN hopes to weed these out in an intensive approval process that will take months, at the least, and also involve governments and other agencies.

"I think we've crossed the Rubicon," said Antony van Couvering, CEO of Top Level Domain Holdings Ltd.

"We were expecting it to happen some time in 2009," he said, adding that the change was also delayed by governments wanting to handle trademark issues in their own countries. "The process has been so lengthy that some people who wanted to do it are now either broke or disgusted."

COMPANIES

Experts say corporations should be among the first to register, resulting in domain names ending in brands like .toyota, .apple or .coke.

The move is seen as a big opportunity for brands to gain more control over their online presence and send visitors more directly to parts of their sites -- and a danger for those who fail to take advantage.

Japanese electronics giant Canon, for instance, has already said it plans to apply for rights to use domain names ending with .canon.

Besides the $185,000 to apply, individuals or organisations will have to show a legitimate claim to the name they are buying. ICANN is taking on hundreds of consultants to whom it will outsource the job of adjudicating claims.

Today, just 22 gTLDs exist -- .com, .org and .info are a few examples -- plus about 250 country-level domains like .uk or .cn. After the change, several hundred new gTLDs are expected to come into existence.

As well as big brands, organisations such as cities or other communities are expected to apply.

GTLDs such as .nyc, .london or .food could provide opportunities for many smaller businesses to grab names no longer available at the .com level -- like bicycles.london or indian.food.

"It's the next expansion of the Internet, it's the future of the Internet," said Kieren McCarthy, the CEO of .Nxt,Inc, a San Francisco-based company which covers Internet policy and governance issues.

"I think our kids will think that we were crazy to always talk about .coms."

(Additional reporting by Georgina Prodhan in LONDON; Editing by Ron Popeski)

END ARTICLE
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Who has viewed this thread (Total: 1) View details

Who has watched this thread (Total: 2) View details

The Rule #1

Do not insult any other member. Be polite and do business. Thank you!

Members Online

Sedo - it.com Premiums

IT.com

Premium Members

MariaBuy

Upcoming events

Our Mods' Businesses

UrlPick.com

*the exceptional businesses of our esteemed moderators

Top Bottom