FTC Chairman Weighs in on New TLDs

Jon Leibowitz

FTC Chairman, Jon Leibowitz

Chairman Jon Leibowitz wrote a letter to ICANN yesterday asking them to:

“(1) implement the new gTLD program as a pilot program and substantially reduce the number of gTLDs that are introduced in the first application round,

(2) strengthen ICANN’s contractual compliance program, in particular by hiring additional compliance staff,

(3) develop a new ongoing program to monitor consumer issues that arise during the first round of implementing the new gTLD program,

(4) conduct an assessment of
each new proposed gTLD’s risk of consumer harm as part of the evaluation and approval process, and

(5) improve the accuracy of Whois data, including by imposing a registrant verification requirement.”

The tone of this letter sounds very serious. It was copied to powerful Sentators and Committee Members. But I still sense that the FTC knows that new TLDs will go forward. He also stated:

“Before approving any new gTLD applications, we urge ICANN to take the steps described below to mitigate the risk of serious consumer injury and to improve the accuracy of Whois data. We look forward to working with ICANN as it honors these commitments to ensure that the new gTLD program benefits both consumers and businesses alike.”

As I read through the letter, I kept thinking, “these are all things that ICANN has been focusing on for the last ten years. There aren’t perfect answers but certainly ICANN has improved in all of these areas and continues to do so.

I suspect that the ANA lobby got to the FTC and motivated them to write this letter. The requests aren’t unreasonable and do hit many of ICANN’s weaknesses but misses the point that ICANN has already addressed many of these things and is actively addressing them now.

Some of the points seem exaggerated because there will be no more harm to consumers because of new TLDs. Anything that crooks will be able to do with new TLDs is being done already. It’s the same number of criminals and will be the same number of crimes; just with different names.

Read the letter… | Source: FTC | Date posted: 12/17/2011

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U.S. Says It Will Not Block The New Gtld Program

Lawrence Strickling

Lawrence Strickling, NTIA

I was encouraged by two articles today. I predicted many times that the ANA and other obstructionists, would not block ICANN from introducing new TLDs next year. It appears that their only recourses may be to go to court or to get their members ready for new TLDs. I’m not sure they can make an effective court case either.

So the NTIA and Congress both seem unlikely to try to stop new TLDs, and for good reason that Kevin lays out in the first article below. If ICANN is stopped, it will have a bad effect on their existence and likely put management of the Internet and domain name system closer to control by some International body like the United Nations or ISO. This would be a very negative consequence and it is a real one to consider. We, as a country and as a business community, need to be careful what we ask for.

Anyway, in the first article…
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U.S. Senate To Hold New gTLDs Hearing Next Week

Steve DelbiancoDot-Next.com reported today that the US Senate will hold a full committee hearing next week on new TLDs.  This will be a very interesting one to watch since so many very large advertisers have been unhappy with the introduction.  They’ve been lobbying like crazy to delay or hold them back.  From dot-nxt.com…

The US Senate will hold a full committee hearing on new gTLDs next week where it will “examine the merits and implications of this new program and ICANN’s continuing efforts to address concerns raised by the Internet community”.

The hearing will be at 10am on Thursday 8 December in Washington DC and will be webcast.

There has been speculation about a hearing by the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation for some weeksThere has been speculation about a hearing by the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation for some weeks following reports of heavy lobbying by the Association of National…

Read the story… | Source: Dot-Nxt.com | Date posted: 12/6/2011

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Handy Tool For Translating New TLDs

Update – 2012-02-29: I placed the translator widget on my site for a few months. Today I found out the widget is broken. But the site is still up and I still consider it pretty handy. Sorry if you tried to use it here and it didn’t work. I hate sites that don’t work and have now removed the widget from my site.

I had the opportunity today to discuss how a word translates into several languages today. It got me thinking… Is there a service that translates a single word into several languages at once? This would be a popular tool over the next several months since many new TLD applicants will want to see what their applied-for string looks like or how it is spelled in various worldwide languages.

Nice Translator ToolI found something pretty cool and it’s free… It’s called Nice Translator (.com). A couple of university students took some time out of their schedule and came up with the perfect tool. I also have their plugin on my sidebar. I love it!

When you arrive at the site, you 1.) click on the “Add Translators” button at the top and then, 2.) begin clicking on the various languages you wish to see translations for. Once you’ve added all the language buttons you desire, you 3.) click “done”.

Now, you can type in the word or phrase string that you are wanting translated and you will be presented with a neat list of the word or phrase you typed in translated into as many as thirty-seven languages around the world including many that use other-than-Latin scripts such as Greek or Chinese.

This tool can be handy to allow potential applicants to decide between various options. For example, if an applicant is interested in getting an automobile related TLD, .auto will translate much more widely around the globe than .car.

Take a look at the results:

Besides Portuguese (carro), “.car” translates very differently in all languages whereas .auto translates exact in spelling or closely in the following languages:

  • Catalan
  • Czech (automaticky)
  • Danish
  • Dutch
  • English
  • Estonian
  • Finnish
  • French
  • German
  • Greek
  • Hungarian (Automatikus)
  • Italian
  • Indonesian
  • Latvian (Automatiska)
  • Lithuanian
  • Norwegian
  • Polish (Automatycznie)
  • Portuguese (Automático)
  • Romanian
  • Slovak
  • Spanish (Automatico) &
  • Swedish

Other languages like Russian and Turkish are also not too far off but further than I’d think is comfortable.

The main point is that, thanks to these two young web programmers (and Google or Bing) a tool exists that can give you a cursory look at how your considered .string will translate in many languages at once.

Disclaimer: I make no warranties or claims about the accuracy about this referred site. I just thought it was handy and pretty cool and I’ve never seen a free service like this before. There are a lot of ways domain name professionals could use this tool.

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