The .Sport Top Level Domain

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Friday 24 October 2008

ICANN publishes the draft 'Applicant Guidebook' for new generic top-level domains

A draft 'Applicant Guidebook' for new generic top-level domains (gTLDs), is now available for review and comment at http://www.icann.org/en/topics/new-gtld-comments-en.htm. The draft Guidebook provides information for those interested in applying for new generic top-level domains.

"Since ICANN was founded 10 years ago, one of the foundational principles has been to support competition and consumer choice in generic top-level domains. That competition is meant to promote innovation and enhance user choice and satisfaction" said Dr Paul Twomey, ICANN's President and Chief Executive Officer.

"The Internet has produced great openness and innovation that has led to changes few of us imagined. The effect of opening up the top-level of the domain system will enable more innovation and entrepreneurial applications" he said.

"One huge area of potential innovation will be applications for names that are in non-Roman characters, or Internationalized Domain Names (IDNs). Currently there are only 21 generic top-level names and they are all in characters that look like English. There are 1.5 billion Internet users and many non-English speakers will have the opportunity to express the whole of a domain name in characters that look like their language," Dr Twomey said.

The draft Applicant Guidebook and accompanying material will be made available in Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish according to ICANN's translation policy. The modules contain information on the evaluation fee, the application process and evaluation criteria, as well as background material.

Designed to accompany the draft Applicant Guidebook is a set of Explanatory Memoranda that are intended to assist understanding of the implementation work for new gTLDs. In addition, two new papers: "Cost Considerations of the new gTLDs Program" and "Summary of Changes to Base Agreement for New gTLDs" are also being released and complete the explanatory memoranda.

Amongst the 6 modules and over 200 pages of the draft Guidebook and Memoranda, some key areas of interest are:

  • How contested strings (or names) will be determined;
  • How applications for geographic names will be considered;
  • Technical requirements for new names that encompass internationalized domain names;
  • The rights of intellectual property holders;
  • How morality and public order objections can be raised;
  • The cost of the evaluation process and how it is constructed.

There will be two comment periods of 45 days each. Every Government in the world is being sent a letter to draw their attention to the draft and the draft Guidebook remains subject to further consultation and revision.

"There has already been robust discussion and consultation regarding many phases of the new gTLD implementation plan, but this is the first opportunity to consider the application and evaluation processes as a whole," Dr Twomey said. "There's been a lot of thought involved in producing the draft Guidebook and we've used best practice and outside experts to assist us in developing the application process. Now is the time for close scrutiny, questions and input that will shape the end result and make it stronger," he said.

Tuesday 17 June 2008

Discover .SPORT at EGENI Paris - 20th June

The annual EGENI event in Paris will take place on the 20th June 2008, right before the ICANN meeting, at the same venue.

We will take this opportunity to present the .SPORT project. It is your chance to discover what is behind .SPORT and how you can help make it happen.

Friday 23 May 2008

Welcome !

Welcome to the world of .Sport !

The DotSport® Consortium intends to run the generic top level domain (gTLD) .sport of the Domain Name System of the Internet. We will work towards having .sport included in the root zone according to the rules set forth by ICANN and be delegated the management of this gTLD.

While current gTLDs tend to focus on a vertical groups (e.g. commercial entities, network providers, organisations, museums, cooperatives, etc.) or regional groups within the global Internet, .sport will embrace a horizontal perspective, with a clear brand to reach and enrich the broad global community. Unlike country code TLDs also, which target a local audience, .sport will allow the user to express a international community relevance.

The sports community is large and global. It ranges from top international associations to millions of large and small sports clubs all over the world. Sports is also a large industry, ranging from sporting equipment to media groups.  The .sport domain can be naturally used by individuals, businesses, organisations as well as community groups,  promoting a diverse and dynamic community within the .sport namespace.

“Sport” is also a word used in many languages. When we looked at the Wikipedia page on sport, we noticed that 26 languages used the exact word «sport» in Roman script. So, unlike other top level domains which are mostly meaningful in the English language,.sport aims at reaching across borders, cultures and languages, true to the values of the sports community.  In fact, more than 1.4 billion people use the word "sport" daily.

For more details, jump to the Most Asked Questions page.