This statement is made by
Edward Sweeney and Vincent Hamm on behalf of Rathbawn Computers Limited.
Description of TLD Policies
[For sponsored
TLDs, this part of the application is to be completed by the sponsoring
organization. For unsponsored TLDs, the registry operator should complete this
part of the application. Please refer to the Detailed Application Instructions
for more information on the requirements for new TLD applications.
The operation
of a TLD involves the implementation of policies on a very large number of
topics. Applicants are urged to use their response to this part of the
application to demonstrate their detailed knowledge of what topics are involved
and their careful analysis and clear articulation of the policies they propose
on these topics.
Please place
the legend "CONFIDENTIAL" on any part of your description that you
have listed in item F3.1 of your Statement of Requested Confidential Treatment
of Materials Submitted.
Section III of
this application applies only to applicants for restricted TLDs. Ordinarily,
restricted TLDs should be sponsored.]
I.
GENERAL
TLD POLICIES (Required for all TLDs. Note that two special policy areas‑‑policies
during the start‑up period and restrictions on who may register within
the TLD and for what purpose‑‑are covered in sections II and III
below.)
COMPETITION PRINCIPLES
BACKGROUND
The history of the pricing of domain name
registrations has been characterised by the exploitation of monopoly power characterised by high prices and
inefficient registries. The leading example is Netsol’s charging regime before
the prospect of the appointment of ICANN approved registrars emerged. But it is by no means
the only example.
Another useful and still current example is Australia, where Melbourne IT currently
holds a de facto monopoly
over registrations in .au arising from the failure of the cc TLD
administrator to appoint other registrars. Melbourne IT is also an ICANN approved registrar. In the
competitive market for .com and .net registrations, its prices go as low as AUD
17 (USD 9.18) or perhaps even
lower, whereas in .au, it never discounts from its published retail prices of AUD 125 for two years
and reseller prices of AUD 100 for two years. These rates equate to USD 33 and
USD 27 per year.
Thus, Melbourne IT’s prices for its monopoly product are three times the price
it charges for its competitive product. Further, its .au registrations are not instantaneous
and this indicates that their system is not fully
automated even today. Other examples abound. Many of the cc TLD registries are
inefficient and do not deliver to their stakeholders the price and
service levels which are achievable. This is essentially because they exploit monopoly power.
In the absence of specific legislation controlling
prices, antitrust laws do not prohibit the charging of monopoly prices
per se. In critical areas such as
telecommunications,
where incumbent advantage acts contrary to the interests of consumers,
legislation to prohibit the extraction of monopoly rents is invariably necessary to protect the interests of
consumers.
Partly because development of the internet has
outstripped the ability of legislators to act to protect consumers, and partly
because no one legislature can effectively mandate conduct for more than one cc
TLD, the pricing
conduct of cc TLD registries has been unconstrained except by the limits of
their monopoly.
Hence pricing has been high and will remain high (in comparison to cost) unless and until effective competition is introduced.
The
applicants
have an established track record in bringing effective price competition to
domain name pricing. Capital Networks was a founding member of CORE and
an early ICANN approved registrar. Through its TOTALNIC.com
Division, Capital Networks LLC pioneered
price competition in .com, .net and .org immediately upon commencement of business. Its pricing offers forced the
breakdown of what until then appeared to be emerging oligopoly pricing which shadowed
Netsol high prices. Capital Networks LLC, of which the applicants are the
directors, was the
world’s first firm to
offer half price .com and .net registrations and it has been a price leader
ever since. It remains among the cheapest in terms of untied, non-promotional sales. Other
firms advertise cheaper prices but the fine print often involves charges for changing registrars or the domain name sale is
promotional. Many apparently cheap registrars tie registration services
to other services, such as web hosting. TotalNIC sells domain names without ties of any description
and does not impose any costs to protect itself from churn.
The applicants intend that Rathbawn Computers will operate the new TLD registries on the same principles. Although the TLDs will be constrained by other TLDs, and will in turn compete
with them, the
applicants do not
ask ICANN or
consumers to trust their statement of intention. Instead Rathbaqwn
Computers will offer a unique contractual
compact, embodied in the competition rules set forth below. The adoption of these rules
means that the registries will be the world leaders in pricing, both in absolute
dollar terms and in the
establishment of the principle that consumers have the right to purchase domain
names for the lowest possible price consistent with the continued viability of the service.
We expect that the pricing of the registries will become the industry
benchmark.
Once the new TLDs are operating and have achieved more than
insubstantial scale, the availability of their prices will lead to a recognition by consumers (and
other stakeholders) that
the real per unit
of registration costs
of operating TLD registries are very low. This will lead to public pressure on other
TLD registries to lower their prices. It
may also lead to the threat of legislation if public pressure is insufficient.
In the case of domain name registrations, the problem of monopoly is
exacerbated by the presence of vertical integration. Registries also compete downstream
with their
customer registrars and therefore have an incentive to increase their customers’ costs and lower their own.
The competition rules set out below will bind Rathbawn
Computers not to
compete as registrar but to confine itself to operating the registries.
The result of this limitation is that the economic
incentives which influence the conduct of the registries change dramatically. A
vertically integrated registry has an incentive to limit sales by maintaining high prices. It
also has an incentive to limit sales through registrars other than its own registrar. It has an incentive
to discourage independent registrars from discounting prices, as such discounts
adversely impact its own registrar operations.
A dedicated cost based non discriminating registry has only the
incentive of maximising sales through all registrars without discrimination. It has an incentive to
facilitate the entry of new registrars, whereas a vertically integrated registry has
an incentive to restrict new entry as much as possible.
THE PRINCIPLES
The following
principles will form part of the contract between ICANN and Rathbawn
Computers as Registrar of each of the Registries for the proposed gTLDs:
1.
The registry will offer service
to all ICANN approved registrars,
which can demonstrate technical compence appointment as registrars.
2.
Neither the registry nor any registrar
in which any director of the registry holds any interest will compete for registrations as a registrar,
thus ensuring that competition is not distorted by market power arising from
vertical integration.
3.
The registry will not
discriminate between registrars in relation to pricing or service levels.
4.
The registry will not engage
in any conduct which constitutes an abuse of a dominant position.
5.
The registry will price registrations on estimated TSLRC (total service long
run incremental cost) principles (initially $3 per name per year). The registrar will
cause its application of TSLRC principles to be audited bi-annually by Ormsby
Rhodes, Dublin and certified to ICANN by the auditor. The application of these
principles will lead to registration charges much lower than those of Netsol in
.com, .net and .org. In the first two years before TSLRC can be precisely
determined, the registry will charge $3 plus any required ICANN contribution
per automated registration. The Registry does not expect that the TSLRC price
for automated registrations will exceed $3. The Registry expects that the
bi-annual review will result in a significant reduction in charges.
6.
The
Registry will require a contractual commitment from registrars that a registrar which operates a
gTLD or a ccTLD registry or for any other reason enjoys a dominant position in
any market shall not
abuse its dominant position by any conduct in relation to the registration of domain names in any of
the TLDs administered by the applicant.
7.
Registrars
will be prohibited from charging domain name owners any fee for changing
registrars except a fee (approved by the Registry or by the CEO of ICANN)
strictly limited to the registrar’s actual costs incurred by reason of the
change. Substantial breach will be a ground for suspension or cancellation of
appointment.
Principles 2 to 5 govern the conduct of the
registry. Principle 6 is calculated to ensure that dominant registries or
other dominant industry professionals do not use domain registrations in the TLDs as a tool in the abuse of
their dominant position. This provision is unnecessary in the USA and in the EC
where antitrust legislation also prohibits such conduct, but it has potential
application in other jurisdictions without
effective antitrust laws. In such jurisdictions, the applicant wishes to be
able to ensure that registrations in the TLDs for which it manages the
registries serve the interests of promoting competition and are not able to be
captured by a dominant firm. Principle 7 is calculated to prevent
registrars from abusing market power in the after market of customers of the
registrar, who might in the absence of such a provision be effectively
prevented from churning to more competitive registrars.
E1. In General. Please provide a full and detailed
description of all policies to be followed in the TLD (other than those covered
in response to items E11‑E21). If the TLD's policy on a particular topic
is proposed to be identical to that reflected by a particular version of any of
the following documents, it is sufficient for your response to identify the
topic, to give a brief summary of the policy, and for the details to reference
the document and section:
ICANN Registrar Accreditation
Agreement
NSI Registrar License and Agreement
ICANN‑NSI Registry Agreement
Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy
Your response should comprehensively describe
policies on all topics to be followed in connection with the proposed TLD. The
following items (E2‑E10) are examples only and should not limit your
description.
Registrants must accept the UDRP as a binding means
of arbitration.
A person who is affected may bring a complaint for
arbitration, which arbitration shall be conducted in accordance with WIPO
rules.
The Registry will have the right to refuse, and
within thirty days of registration, cancel the registration of any domain name
which the Registry reasonably considers to convey a false representation of
association with a government, establishment or business.
E2. TLD String. Please identify the TLD string(s)
you are proposing. For format requirements for TLD strings, see the answer to
FAQ #5.
See Schedules 1 to 5.
E4. Registrars. Describe in detail the policies for
selection of, and competition among, registrars. Will domain‑name holders
deal through registrars, directly with the registry operator, or some
combination of the two? What are the respective roles, functions, and
responsibilities for the registry operator and registrars? If registrars are to
be employed, how and by whom will they be selected or accredited? If the number
of registrars will be restricted, what number of registrars will be selected?
Have the qualifying registrars already been selected? On what basis will
selections among those seeking to be registrars be made, and who will make
them? If registrars are to be used, what mechanisms will be used to ensure that
TLD policies are implemented?
Registrations within the TLDs will be made available
through all qualified ICANN approved registrars which demonstrate technical
competence. There is no limitation on
the maximum number of registrars to be selected. This situation will be reassessed if the number of registrars
becomes so great that the efficiency of the registry is compromised. The question of whether the registry’s
efficiency is compromised would be determined by the registry operator in
conjunction with ICANN. The registry
operator guarantees that the number of registrars would not be limited to a
number below 1000.
Competition between registrars will be encouraged by
a prohibition on the use of the registrar function as an abuse of a dominant
position and by a prohibition on any charges above actual costs being imposed
for customers wishing to churn to another registrar.
Neither the Registry nor any company in which any of its
directors hold any interest will offer registration services in any of
the gTLDs. The Registry
will be bound by the Competition Principles outlined in this application and by
that means, competition between Registrars will not be inhibited by vertical
integration of the Registry. The Registry will be bound not to discriminate
between Registrars.
Prospective registrants would therefore need to deal
with registrars rather than the registry operator.
Registrars are not required to actively enforce TLD
policies however they are required to make registrants aware of the TLD
policies and it is the responsibility of the registrar to ensure that
registrants agree to these policies.
The registry will enforce the policies as described.
E5. Intellectual Property Provisions. Describe the
policies for protection of intellectual property. Your response should address
at least the following questions, as appropriate to the TLD:
E5.1. What measures will be
taken to discourage registration of domain names that infringe intellectual
property rights?
By requiring prospective
registrants to submit to the application of the UDRP and binding arbitration by
ICANN approved arbitrators subject to WIPO rules, the registration of domain
names which infringe intellectual property rights will be discouraged. A 30 day
period for cancellation of misleading or misrepresentative names is further
discouragement.
E5.2. If you are proposing
pre‑screening for potentially infringing registrations, how will the pre‑screening
be performed?
Other than indicated
elsewhere in this application, no additional pre-screening is envisaged.
E5.3. What registration
practices will be employed to minimize abusive registrations?
Registrars will be required
to make prospective registrants aware of the application of the UDRP and
registry policies.
E5.4. What measures do you
propose to comply with applicable trademark and anti‑cybersquatting
legislation?
As well as providing the
facility for trademark holders to utilise the functionality of the UDRP and
arbitration process the Registry will, on the basis of an order from a court of
competent jurisdiction or an ICANN approved dispute resolution service
provider, take such action as the court or the service provider may order in order
to ensure compliance with such legislation.
E5.5. Are you proposing any
special protections (other than during the start‑up period) for famous
trademarks?
The Registry will act on an
order of a Court of competent jurisdiction or of an ICANN approved dispute
resolution service provider.
E5.6. How will complete, up‑to‑date,
reliable, and conveniently provided Whois data be maintained, updated, and
accessed concerning registrations in the TLD?
It is the responsibility of
each registrar to provide a functional WHOIS service compliant with RFCs and/or
registry guidelines as and when they may become available.
The registry will operate a
referral WHOIS containing limited data (eg delegation information and the
appropriate registrar’s WHOIS details) similar to the current service operated
by NSI at whois.crsnic.net.
E6. Dispute Resolution. Describe the policies for
domain name and other dispute resolution. If you are proposing variations to
the policies followed in .com, .net, and .org, consider the following
questions:
E6.1. To what extent are you
proposing to implement the Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy?
We do not propose a
variation to the current policies governing .com, .net and .org in respect of
dispute resolution. We consider that uniformity across gTLDs is an important
policy objective.
E6.2. Please describe any
additional, alternative, or supplemental dispute resolution procedures you are
proposing.
N/A
beyond those described elsewhere herein.
E7. Data Privacy, Escrow, and Whois. Describe the
proposed policies on data privacy, escrow and Whois service.
Registrars are required to publish the details of a
registration including admin, technical, billing and zone contacts as well as
registrant and delegation details.
Registrants are required to make such information
publicly available through their registrar’s WHOIS service in the form
described. If registrants for some
reason require suppression of personal details this can be achieved by
nominating a trustee for that purpose.
Such trustee shall be required to comply with all registry policies as
if it were the beneficial registrant except in the event that it can identify
and conclusively demonstrate the identity of the beneficial registrant. In any event the registry’s right to take
action against the registrant of a name shall not be deemed to be affected by
virtue of the existence or otherwise of a trustee relationship of this nature.
Registrars are required to provide various
information (escrow) as described in the registry operator’s proposal for the
purpose of maintaining at the registry a reliable backup record of all
registrations for which that registrar is responsible.
The registry is prepared to escrow this information
and other relevant information to ICANN should this be required.
E8. Billing and Collection. Describe variations in
or additions to the policies for billing and collection.
Registrars will be required to place funds on
deposit with the Registry. It is
envisaged that payment will be accepted via credit card in addition to check
and telegraphic transfers to replenish a registrar’s available credit level.
Allowing payments via credit card will remove some
of the barriers to commencement of business which a large number of ICANN
approved but inactive registrars appear to have encountered.
E9. Services and Pricing. What registration services
do you propose to establish charges for and, for each such service, how much do
you propose to charge?
Registration of a name is the only operation for
which we propose a cost will be levied by the registry.
The registry is prepared to charge at a level
equivalent to the long term economic cost of the operation of a domain over
time. We estimate that this to will be a
figure much lower than current Netsol registry charges in .com, .net and .org.
Start up charges will be $3 per domain name per year and it is not expected
that TSLRC will exceed $3 for automated registrations/renewals.
E10. Other. Please describe any policies concerning
topics not covered by the above questions.
II. REGISTRATION POLICIES DURING THE START‑UP
PERIOD (Required for all TLDs)
E11. In this section, you should thoroughly describe
all policies (including implementation details) that you propose to follow
during the start‑up phase of registrations in the TLD, to the extent they
differ from the General TLD Policies covered in items E1‑E9. The
following questions highlight some of the areas that should be considered for
start‑up policies:
E12. How do you propose to address the potential
rush for registration at the initial opening of the TLD? How many requested
registrations do you project will be received by the registry operator within
the first day, week, month, and quarter? What period do you believe should be
considered the TLD's "start‑up period," during which special
procedures should apply?
We do not consider that there will be an exceptional
initial rush in all the TLDs which are the subject of this application,
although the registry will be prepared for a rush across them all. The initial
demand assumptions are detailed in Schedules 1-5. We estimate that the long
term demand for all the TLDs will grow as stakeholders learn of their superior
price/quality mix. In aggregate they fall well within the capacity of the
registry architecture proposed.
During the first three months the Registry will
impose random registrar queueing procedures to ensure fairness and overcome any
attempts at system exploitation.
E13. Do you propose to place limits on the number of
registrations per registrant? Per registrar? If so, how will these limits be
implemented?
No. Proposed
policy is that it is not appropriate or necessary to place limitations upon the
number of registrations per registrar at any time.
E14. Will pricing mechanisms be used to dampen a
rush for registration at the initial opening of the TLD? If so, please describe
these mechanisms in detail.
Yes. The
initial cost of a registration within .xxx / .sex during the sunrise period
will be specified at $16 in order to reduce a rush for registration.No. The Registry will
seek to establish its reputation from the outset
as a registry service provider which prices at economic cost. An initial pricing
mechanism would distort
this message.
E15. Will you offer any "sunrise period"
in which certain potential registrants are offered the opportunity to register
before registration is open to the general public? If so, to whom will this
opportunity be offered (those with famous marks, registered trademarks, second‑level
domains in other TLDs, pre‑registrations of some sort, etc.)? How will
you implement this?
Yes. One month will be allowed for the priority
registration of famous marks or registered trademarks. Applications during this
period must be accompanied by evidence of registration of mark or trademark.
III. REGISTRATION RESTRICTIONS (Required for
restricted TLDs only)
E16. As noted in the New TLD Application Process
Overview, a restricted TLD is one with enforced restrictions on (1) who may
apply for a registration within the domain, (2) what uses may be made of those
registrations, or (3) both. In this section, please describe in detail the
restrictions you propose to apply to the TLD. Your description should should
define the criteria to be employed, the manner in which you propose they be
enforced, and the consequences of violation of the restrictions. Examples of
matters that should be addressed are:
E17. Describe in detail the criteria for
registration in the TLD. Provide a full explanation of the reasoning behind the
specific policies chosen.
The criteria for registration and applicable
restrictions are detailed in Schedules
1-5. The registry may later, at its
discretion, deny registration in the TLDs to any parties known or considered on
reasonable grounds to have violated the registry’s policies in the past. Any
refusal would be reviewable by an ICANN approved dispute resolution service
provider. Due to the nature of the registry/registrar model it is unlikely that
the registry would enforce such a denial at the level of initial registration
(since the registrar deals with the identification of the registrant rather
than the registry).
E18. Describe the application process for potential
registrants in the TLD.
Potential registrants may apply through participating registrars.
E19. Describe the enforcement procedures and
mechanisms for ensuring registrants meet the registration requirements.
These are described in the schedules. Other than
there set out, no restrictions will apply.
E20. Describe any appeal process from denial of
registration.
Should the registry introduce vetting procedures
which result in the approval or denial of registrations as applications are
processed at first instance the registry will, in conjunction with ICANN and
any relevant bodies, introduce procedures which allow the registrant the right
of appeal against any denial. The
registry would be required to demonstrate the reasonable connection between the
applicant entity and any entity known to have previously breached registry
policies in a material manner.
E21. Describe any procedure that permits third
parties to seek cancellation of a TLD registration for failure to comply with
restrictions.
N/A.
IV. CONTEXT OF THE TLD WITHIN THE DNS (Required for
all TLDs)
V. VALUE OF PROPOSAL AS A PROOF OF CONCEPT (Required
for all TLDs)
Parts IV and V are dealt with in the Schedules.
By signing this application through its
representative, the Applicants attest that the information contained in this
Description of TLD Policies, and all referenced supporting documents, are true
and accurate to the best of Applicants’ knowledge.
_______________________________
Signature
Edward Sweeney, Vincent Hamm____
Name (please print)
_______________________________
Title
Rathbawn Computers Limited_______
Edward Sweeney and Vincent Hamm
Date 02
October 2000
SCHEDULE 1
Incorporated and registered business names gTLDs
LLC
LLP
PLC
AG
GMBH
SocA
All other
legally recognised suffixes for non-natural legal persons.
RBN
(registered business name) and all other recognised suffixes for registered
businesses.
To be
administered as different gTLDs.
Description of TLD Policies
The TLDs will be restricted. The only registrations
permitted will be of names which are identical or substantially identical
(including the TLD suffix) to a name
under which the entity is entitled by law to trade.
LLC
LLP
LTD
PLC
AG
GMBH
SocA
All other legally recognised suffixes for
non-natural legal persons.
RBN (registered business name)
REGISTRY RULES
1.
Only
incorporated legal persons or registered businesses may register.
2.
The
name sought must be identical to or substantially the same as a name under
which the entity is legally entitled to trade or identify itself.
3.
Applicants
for registration must provide full details of the incorporation or registration
number and place or incorporation or registration and these details will be
included in the WHOIS database.
4.
The
registry shall comply with any reasonable and lawful direction of a government
authority responsible for the administration of legislation relating to non
natural legal persons in relation to the registration of domain names of
entities within their jurisdiction.
5.
In
the event that the name of the entity changes or the entity ceases to be
registered or incorporated such that the domain name ceases to comply with rule
2, the registry shall after having given the admin contact 14 days notice and
an opportunity during that period or such further period as the rregistry
considers reasonable in the circumstances, cancel the registration.
6.
Any
webpage shown on the URL for the domain name must contain a link to the
publicly searchable government database where the legislatively proscribed
particulars of the registrant are to be found where such database exists. Over
time, the registry may require that the link be directly to the location of the
searchable information about the registrant.
Complaint procedure.
A person who is affected may bring a complaint
before an ICANN approved arbitrator and such an arbitrator shall conduct an
arbitration concerning the question of breach, which arbitration shall be
conducted in accordance with WIPO rules.
E2. TLD String. Please identify the TLD string(s)
you are proposing. For format requirements for TLD strings, see the answer to
FAQ #5.
LLC
LLP
LTD
PLC
AG
GMBH
SocA
All other legally recognised suffixes for
non-natural legal persons.
RBN (registered business name)
E3. Naming conventions. Describe the naming
conventions and structure within the TLD. E.g., will registrants have names
registered at the second level (directly under the TLD, as in registered‑name.com),
or will the TLD be organized with sub‑domains so that registered domain
names are created at a lower level (as in registered‑name.travel.com)?
Domain names will be delegated at the second level
directly to end-user registrants.
Eg. BP.plc
A protocol will be established for the common
identification of relevant statutory authorities with responsibility for
non-natural persons and registered businesses. At present we consider that
sec.gov.USA.LLC
provides a suitable protocol but this part of the
proposal will be subject to consultations with the leading statutory
authorities in the larger jurisdictions.
E5. Intellectual Property Provisions. Describe the
policies for protection of intellectual property. Your response should address
at least the following questions, as appropriate to the TLD:
E5.1. What measures will be
taken to discourage registration of domain names that infringe intellectual
property rights?
By limiting registrations to
the names of already registered legal persons or businesses, the scope for
piracy or infringement is limited. Further by requiring prospective registrants
to submit to the application of the UDRP and binding mediation by ICANN
approved mediators subject to WIPO rules we feel that the registration of
domain names which infringe intellectual property rights will be discouraged.
E5.2. If you are proposing
pre‑screening for potentially infringing registrations, how will the pre‑screening
be performed?
Registration is restricted
to already existing business and legal personality names. Otherwise
pre-screening applications for registration is not a component of this
proposal.
E5.3. What registration
practices will be employed to minimize abusive registrations?
Registrants must provide
proof of registration of the name being applied for as a business name or the
name of a legal person. Registrars will be required to make prospective
registrants aware of the application of the UDRP and registry policies.
E5.4. What measures do you
propose to comply with applicable trademark and anti‑cybersquatting
legislation?
The highly restricted nature
of the TLDs will reduce the degree to which opportunities to act unlawfully are
presented. Further, as well as providing the facility for trademark holders to
utilise the functionality of the UDRP and mediation process the Registry will,
on the basis of an order from a court of competent jurisdiction, take such
action as the court may order in order to ensure compliance with such
legislation.
The registry shall operate a
referral WHOIS containing limited data (eg delegation information and the
appropriate registrar’s WHOIS details) similar to the current service operated
by NSI at whois.crsnic.net
II. REGISTRATION POLICIES DURING THE START‑UP
PERIOD (Required for all TLDs)
E11. In this section, you should thoroughly describe
all policies (including implementation details) that you propose to follow
during the start‑up phase of registrations in the TLD, to the extent they
differ from the General TLD Policies covered in items E1‑E9. The
following questions highlight some of the areas that should be considered for
start‑up policies:
E12. How do you propose to address the potential
rush for registration at the initial opening of the TLD? How many requested
registrations do you project will be received by the registry operator within
the first day, week, month, and quarter? What period do you believe should be
considered the TLD's "start‑up period," during which special
procedures should apply?
We consider it likely that start up registrations
will be very large. Our demand expectations are set out in schedule 1 to the
application and fall well within the proposed registry specification.
E13. Do you propose to place limits on the number of
registrations per registrant? Per registrar? If so, how will these limits be
implemented?
No. Given the restricted nature of the TLDs, no
additional restriction arises for consideration.
E14. Will pricing mechanisms be used to dampen a
rush for registration at the initial opening of the TLD? If so, please describe
these mechanisms in detail.
No. The Registry wishes to establish its reputation
from the outset as a registry which prices at economic cost. An initial pricing
mechanism would distort this message.
E15. Will you offer any "sunrise period"
in which certain potential registrants are offered the opportunity to register
before registration is open to the general public? If so, to whom will this
opportunity be offered (those with famous marks, registered trademarks, second‑level
domains in other TLDs, pre‑registrations of some sort, etc.)? How will
you implement this?
No. The TLDs’ restrictions go some of the way to
meet these issues.
III. REGISTRATION RESTRICTIONS (Required for
restricted TLDs only)
E16. As noted in the New TLD Application Process
Overview, a restricted TLD is one with enforced restrictions on (1) who may
apply for a registration within the domain, (2) what uses may be made of those
registrations, or (3) both. In this section, please describe in detail the
restrictions you propose to apply to the TLD. Your description should should
define the criteria to be employed, the manner in which you propose they be
enforced, and the consequences of violation of the restrictions. Examples of
matters that should be addressed are:
E17. Describe in detail the criteria for
registration in the TLD. Provide a full explanation of the reasoning behind the
specific policies chosen.
The restrictions are outlined above. The
justification for the restrictions is that the TLDs are intended to convey to
members of the internet community the statement that the owner of the domain
name is an incorporated legal person or registered business of the particular type
identified by the TLD.
E19. Describe the enforcement procedures and
mechanisms for ensuring registrants meet the registration requirements.
Registrants will be required to provide proof to
their registrars of registered legal personality or registered business name
including a certificate of registration showing the registration authority and
number.
E20. Describe any appeal process from denial of
registration.
There will be no appeal from a denial of
registration on the grounds of failure to provide a certificate of
registration. Should the registry refuse registration to an entity producing
what purports on its face to be a certificate of registration or should the
Registry introduce other vetting procedures which result in the approval or
denial of registrations as applications are processed at first instance the
registry will, in conjunction with ICANN and any relevant bodies introduce
procedures which allow the registrant the right of appeal against any
denial. The registry would be required
to demonstrate the reasonable connection between the applicant entity and any
entity known to have previously breached registry policies in a material
manner.
E21. Describe any procedure that permits third
parties to seek cancellation of a TLD registration for failure to comply with
restrictions.
See section E1 which describes abilities of not only
law enforcement bodies / courts to issue appropriate documentation to the
registry but also the right of a third party individual or interest group to
lodge a complaint with an appropriately qualified arbitrator. In addition, the
registry shall have the power to suspend or cancel the registration of any
domain name in the event that an arbitrator appointed by the registry from the
ICANN panel or elsewhere if no ICANN arbitrator is readily available shall have
inquired into the registration and recommended to the registrar that the domain
name be suspended or cancelled by reason of the fact that it has been used to
mislead or deceive as to the identity of the owner entity or as to an
association between the owner entity and some other firm. It is envisaged that the registry would
refer to an arbitrator any such issue arising on a complaint which appeared to
have substance and in respect of which the complainant was prepared to meet the
costs of the arbitrator.
IV. CONTEXT OF THE TLD WITHIN THE DNS (Required for
all TLDs)
E22. This section is intended to allow you to
describe the benefits of the TLD and the reasons why it would benefit the
global Internet community or some segment of that community. Issues you might
consider addressing include:
E23. What will distinguish the TLD from existing or
other proposed TLDs? How will this distinction be beneficial?
The TLDs will be distinct from existing TLDs in that
they will identify the type of legal personality or registered business of the
domain name owner. This distinction
will be beneficial since it will communicate to the internet community the
precise nature and identity of the owner entity.
E24. What community and/or market will be served or
targeted by this TLD? To what extent is that community or market already served
by the DNS?
The TLDs will serve legal persons and registered
business market directly and, indirectly will serve the market of those seeking
information concerning such entities. Although the community of legal persons
and registered businesses is served by .com, the proposed TLDs provide a more
structured domain name context. A domain name in the proposed TLDs will
immediately provide more information than a domain name in .com.
The proposed TLDs are a more rigorously principled
alternative to .com.
E25. Please describe in detail how your proposal
would enable the DNS to meet presently unmet needs.
The proposal will identify
the nature of the owner entity and will by means of a mandated link to publicly
available records, provide immediately accessible information about the owner
entity.
The proposed TLDS are
intrinsically more logical than .com and, with perfect hindsight, would have
been more appropriate originally than .com, if the growth of the internet had
been foreseeable.
Their intrinsic logical
advantage over the comparatively amorphous .com is a powerful reason for their allocation sooner rather than
later, given that their ultimate introduction is inevitable.
E26. How would the
introduction of the TLD enhance the utility of the DNS for Internet users? For
the community served by the TLD?
The proposed TLDs will
permit legal persons and registered businesses to have a web presence which is
identical to their legal name, including the suffix.
E27. How would the proposed
TLD enhance competition in domain‑name registration services, including
competition with existing TLD registries?
The proposed TLDs are an
immediately viable alternative to .com as they harness pre-existing meaning in
the form of established understandings and therefore do not suffer from the
need of other possible new TLDs to establish a reputation from a tabula rasa.
The proposed TLDs are
intrinsically more meaningful than .com and provide a means by which the DNS
can harness established bodies of meaning rather than superimposing on the
“physical” world a TLD, such as .com and .net, which because of the uncertainty
of the nature of the owners who stand behind
domain names registered within its space, blurs rather than clarifies meaning.
This is one of the most
important but least explored unintended effects of the DNS. Because of its
essentially unstructured form, the DNS not only does not exclude confusion within
its functionality, but actually promotes it.
One of the most important
criteria which ICANN might address in relation to changes to the DNS over time
is the desirability of providing havens of certainty within the DNS and
especially within areas where certainty is highly desirable. The outstanding candidate is the area
represented by the need to know with certainty from the domain name the nature
of the legal entity which it represents.
By making registration
available at long term economic cost and due the fact that the registry would
not operate a registrar function the allocation of the TLD on these terms
would represent a superior competition model to that under which .COM, .NET and
.ORG currently operate.
Additionally by increasing
the available namespace and ability for registrars to participate the
delegation of these TLDs would represent a significant competitive advantage as
compared to the existing DNS structure.
V. VALUE OF PROPOSAL AS A
PROOF OF CONCEPT (Required for all TLDs)
E28. Recent experience in
the introduction of new TLDs is limited in some respects. The current program
of establishing new TLDs is intended to allow evaluation of possible additions
and enhancements to the DNS and possible methods of implementing them. Stated
differently, the current program is intended to serve as a "proof of
concept" for ways in which the DNS might evolve in the longer term. This
section of the application is designed to gather information regarding what
specific concept(s) could be evaluated if the proposed TLD is introduced, how
you propose the evaluation should be done, and what information would be
learned that might be instructive in the long‑term management of the DNS.
Well‑considered and articulated responses to this section will be positively
viewed in the selection process. Matters you should discuss in this section
include:
E29. What concepts are
likely to be proved/disproved by evaluation of the introduction of this TLD in
the manner you propose?
An evaluation of the proposed TLDs will be likely to
prove/disprove:
-
the
efficiency advantages of TLDs in which the precise identity of the owner
entities and their nature is immediately identifiable from their domain name
alone;
-
the
viability of TLDs with a structurally established precise meaning as compared
with TLDs with no intrinsic meaning;
-
the
value to the internet community of the knowledge that domain names in
particular TLDs communicate precise information about the status of their owner
entities;
-
the
extent to which domain names are price elastic;
-
the
extent to which the market regards cost based registration as desirable.
E30. How do you propose that the results of the
introduction should be evaluated? By what criteria should the success or lack
of success of the TLD be evaluated?
We suggest that criteria for evaluation should
include the following:
-
Has
there been substantial uptake of names in the TLDs?
-
Have
the TLDs been recognised by the internet community as conveying precise
information about the nature of the domain name owner entities;
-
Does
the experience of the TLDs suggest that TLDs which convey precise information
about the owner entities provide a facility of practical importance to the
economy and the internet community.
The applicants believe that the comparative lack of
success of the UK incorporated suffixes (BP.plc.uk) arises from the fact that
they are not gTLDs but sub-domains of .uk.
E31. In what way would the results of the evaluation
assist in the long‑range management of the DNS?
The results of the evaluation in respect of
competition issues as well as the successful adoption of the TLD will assist in
the definition and adoption of long-term management strategies for the DNS in
particular in relation to the issues of havens of domain name precision and
cost based registry services.
E32. Are there any reasons other than evaluation of
the introduction process that this particular TLD should be included in the
initial introduction?
The proposed TLDs are so obvious an oversight in the
current DNS that they virtually demand introduction. Their introduction sooner
or later is inevitable and we believe the sooner the better.
Only a very limited number of firms have the
necessary skill set and resources to guarantee the successful implementation
and management of any TLD and this increases the importance of the decision to
allocate a TLD during the initial introduction.
·
The Wireless Application
Protocol gTLD:
Description of TLD Policies
Section III of
this application applies only to applicants for restricted TLDs. Ordinarily,
restricted TLDs should be sponsored.]
There are proposed conditions as follows:
1.
Only
websites which are specifically adapted to WAP shall be addressed by a domain
name within the TLD.
2.
Where
the Registry has cause to believe that websites which are not specifically
adapted to WAP are being hosted on a domain name within the TLD, Registry has a
right to issue a notice requiring registrant to demonstrate WAP capability
within 30 days to the registrant of any domain within .WAP
3.
Failure
to demonstrate WAP capabilities within the 30 days may, in the discretion of the Registry, result in the
suspension/deletion of the domain name concerned.
4.
Websites
promoted via unsolicited email may be suspended/revoked.
E2. TLD String. Please identify the TLD string(s)
you are proposing. For format requirements for TLD strings, see the answer to
FAQ #5.
.WAP (“Wireless Application Protocol”)
E3. Naming conventions. Describe the naming
conventions and structure within the TLD. E.g., will registrants have names
registered at the second level (directly under the TLD, as in registered‑name.com),
or will the TLD be organized with sub‑domains so that registered domain
names are created at a lower level (as in registered‑name.travel.com)?
It is proposed that the TLD will be divided into the
following sub domains:
.com, .co, .net, .org, .edu, ac.
Each of these sub domains will be restricted. A
registrant may register a domain name only if it is already the registered
owner of an identical domain name in the gTLD of the same name.
It is proposed that the TLD will have further sub
domains which mirror each of the ccTLDs, eg .uk, .ie. Each of these sub domains
will have sub sub domains which reflect the sub domains of the relevant cc TLD,
eg .co.uk, .com.au.
A registrant may register in each of sub sub domains
or the sub domains only if it is the registered owner of an identical domain
name in the comparable sub domain of the relevant cc TLD or, in the case of
registrants for domain names in the sub domain, if it is the registered owner
of a domain name in the ccTLD.
At a later stage the registry may open registrations
directly in the second level, eg wirelessenabledwebsite.wap. This decision will
be made in consultation with ICANN and after experience of use of the TLD has
been gained.
E4. Registrars. Describe in detail the policies for
selection of, and competition among, registrars. Will domain‑name holders
deal through registrars, directly with the registry operator, or some
combination of the two? What are the respective roles, functions, and
responsibilities for the registry operator and registrars? If registrars are to
be employed, how and by whom will they be selected or accredited? If the number
of registrars will be restricted, what number of registrars will be selected?
Have the qualifying registrars already been selected? On what basis will
selections among those seeking to be registrars be made, and who will make
them? If registrars are to be used, what mechanisms will be used to ensure that
TLD policies are implemented?
Registrants will deal with registrars rather than
the registry.
The registry will service all accredited ICANN
appointed registrars which can demonstrate technical capability. Technical capability will be assessed by the
use of a test suite to ensure registrars are capable of utilising basic
registry features.
The registry is responsible for the enforcement of
policies rather than the registrar.
II. REGISTRATION POLICIES DURING THE START‑UP
PERIOD (Required for all TLDs)
E11. In this section, you should thoroughly describe
all policies (including implementation details) that you propose to follow
during the start‑up phase of registrations in the TLD, to the extent they
differ from the General TLD Policies covered in items E1‑E9. The
following questions highlight some of the areas that should be considered for
start‑up policies:
E12. How do you propose to address the potential
rush for registration at the initial opening of the TLD? How many requested
registrations do you project will be received by the registry operator within
the first day, week, month, and quarter? What period do you believe should be
considered the TLD's "start‑up period," during which special
procedures should apply?
We anticipate the receipt of approximately 500,000
applications within the first month.
E13. Do you propose to place limits on the number of
registrations per registrant? Per registrar? If so, how will these limits be
implemented?
We feel that such limitations would be artificial
and would have the effect of discriminating against potential registrants (and
registrars also). Therefore we do not
propose placing limits on the number of registrations per registrant or
registrar.
E14. Will pricing mechanisms be used to dampen a
rush for registration at the initial opening of the TLD? If so, please describe
these mechanisms in detail.
No. This would detract from the determination of the
registry to price its services based on cost.
III. REGISTRATION RESTRICTIONS (Required for
restricted TLDs only)
Registration will be restricted to domain names
which reflect a registered domain name in another gTLD or a ccTLD and will be
required to be the same except for the suffix .wap. The Registry’s application
form will make provision for this information and the Registry’s verification
will be automated.
IV. CONTEXT OF THE TLD WITHIN THE DNS (Required for
all TLDs)
E22. This section is intended to allow you to
describe the benefits of the TLD and the reasons why it would benefit the
global Internet community or some segment of that community. Issues you might
consider addressing include:
E23. What will distinguish the TLD from existing or
other proposed TLDs? How will this distinction be beneficial?
The TLD is distinct since it requires that registrants
cater to clients which require hosts within the TLD to serve WAP compliant
content. The TLD will benefit consumers of internet site services by enabling
the rapid identification of WAP enabled sites. One illustration of the benefits
flowing from the TLD is that owners of cell phones will be able to distinguish
WAP sites which offer transactional
cost advantages from non WAP enabled sites which do not. As WAP enabled
terminals become more prevalent, the efficiency gains offered by the TLD will
multiply.
By deploying sub domains which mirror the gTLDs and
cc TLDs, the proposed TLD will enable businesses and information providers to
retain for their wap websites any reputation already established in their
traditional web sites. Conversely, operators of WAP sites will benefit by
reason of the deduction of consumers that the address of the comparable non WAP
site is immediately identifiable from the WAP domain name.
E24. What community and/or market will be served or
targeted by this TLD? To what extent is that community or market already served
by the DNS?
The TLD will immediately service the users of mobile
telephones with WAP capability as well as a broad range of other equipment such
as WAP enabled telephones, fridges, televisions and others as and when they may
become available.
This represents a distinction to current TLD
delegations since there is no way for these users to accurately determine which
URLs/hosts are accessible using WAP.
E25. Please describe in detail how your proposal
would enable the DNS to meet presently unmet needs.
The TLD will enable users who require WAP
functionality to easily locate and access WAP enabled websites and other
content the allocation of this TLD would allow an enhanced level of
functionality to be provided to such devices.
The proposed TLD will have the additional advantage
over existing gTLDs that the suffix has a plain and already established meaning
and does not require substantial promotion or years of consumer experience to
create a public awareness of its significance.
E26. How would the introduction of the TLD enhance
the utility of the DNS for Internet users? For the community served by the TLD?
The advantages of having a TLD dedicated to WAP
enabled websites are apparent when viewed from the perspective of a current or
potential user of WAP technology.
We consider that the majority of current Internet
users and many others will, within a small time period, become users of such
technology. Whilst there will always be
traditional terminal type access to the Internet (from VT100 ->
Windows/Xterm environments) the growing demand for WAP compliant content and
widespread use of the technology demands the creation of a TLD capable of
immediately identifying to users a distinction between WAP enabled and traditional
content.
E27. How would the proposed TLD enhance competition
in domain‑name registration services, including competition with existing
TLD registries?
The proposed TLD will enhance competition in domain
name registration services in one important respect. It will make available to
businesses and information providers an efficient tool for communicating to
users the location of their WAP sites. It will enable consumers to intuitively
assume the WAP site address of any known domain name site. These attributes
make competition for the registraion of domain names more eficient.
In addition, the competition policy of the TLD will
ensure that the registration function will be available for the lowest possible
price. The price regime will force
other registry operators to justify pricing above true long run economic cost
hence forcing prices down.
V. VALUE OF PROPOSAL AS A PROOF OF CONCEPT (Required
for all TLDs)
E28. Recent experience in the introduction of new
TLDs is limited in some respects. The current program of establishing new TLDs
is intended to allow evaluation of possible additions and enhancements to the
DNS and possible methods of implementing them. Stated differently, the current
program is intended to serve as a "proof of concept" for ways in
which the DNS might evolve in the longer term. This section of the application
is designed to gather information regarding what specific concept(s) could be
evaluated if the proposed TLD is introduced, how you propose the evaluation
should be done, and what information would be learned that might be instructive
in the long‑term management of the DNS. Well‑considered and
articulated responses to this section will be positively viewed in the
selection process. Matters you should discuss in this section include:
E29. What concepts are likely to be proved/disproved
by evaluation of the introduction of this TLD in the manner you propose?
-
Are
TLDs dedicated to specific protocols or technologies useful and worthwhile?
E30. How do you propose that the results of the
introduction should be evaluated? By what criteria should the success or lack
of success of the TLD be evaluated?
The TLD’s success can be judged in two ways:
1.
By
the total number of applications and WAP enabled sites registered in the TLD
2.
By
the rate of adoption of the TLD to distinguish between WAP enabled sites and
traditional content.
3.
By
the assessment of the savings to consumers represented by being able to direct
WAP terminal sessions to WAP sites and to avoid such sessions being directed at
non WAP sites.
E31. In what way would the results of the evaluation
assist in the long‑range management of the DNS?
We believe that WAP is the technology which most
requires a dedicated TLD for two reasons:
1.
Widespread
adoption of technology within mobile telephones and other devices.
2.
Requirement
within these devices for compliant websites represents a significant pressure
which the existing DNS is ill equipped to satisfactorily meet.
By delegating a TLD such as .WAP,
ICANN will be able to assess the
importance of further TLDs dedicated to specific applications or protocols
which represents an application of the DNS previously unutilised.
E32. Are there any reasons other than evaluation of
the introduction process that this particular TLD should be included in the
initial introduction?
The broad adoption of WAP technology and likely
further significant growth demand that of any technology WAP is most deserving
of its own TLD. The disadvantages to consumers of deploying WAP terminals in
the use of non WAP sites is a powerful factor in favour of the commissioning of
the proposed TLD.
The establishment of the proposed TLD will enable
WAP terminal operators to exclude non WAP sites from being accessed by their
terminal.
SCHEDULE 3
·
Chinese name TLDs
The following expressions, as separate gTLDs:
.SanSanSan (meaning 333) and .three33 (as the same gTLD)
.BaBaBa (meaning 888) and .eight88 (as the same gTLD)
Shuang Xi (Double Happiness)
Fu (Good Fortune)
Hao Yuen (Good Luck)
Hao (Good)
Xing Yun (Fortune, riches)
As soon as possible, application will be made to extend these gTLDs so
that the expressions in Chinese characters (both traditional and simplified)
will be accepted as alternative ways of identifying the same gTLDs.
Description of TLD Policies
[For sponsored
TLDs, this part of the application is to be completed by the sponsoring
organization. For unsponsored TLDs, the registry operator should complete this
part of the application. Please refer to the Detailed Application Instructions
for more information on the requirements for new TLD applications.
The operation
of a TLD involves the implementation of policies on a very large number of
topics. Applicants are urged to use their response to this part of the
application to demonstrate their detailed knowledge of what topics are involved
and their careful analysis and clear articulation of the policies they propose
on these topics.
Please place
the legend "CONFIDENTIAL" on any part of your description that you
have listed in item F3.1 of your Statement of Requested Confidential Treatment
of Materials Submitted.
Section III of
this application applies only to applicants for restricted TLDs. Ordinarily,
restricted TLDs should be sponsored.]
E2. TLD String. Please identify the TLD string(s)
you are proposing. For format requirements for TLD strings, see the answer to
FAQ #5.
At present the expressions set out below are applied
for, with an indication that application will also be made as soon as feasible
for the Chinese characters in simplified and complex Chinese equivalent:
.SanSanSan (meaning .333) and .three33
.BaBaBa (meaning .888) and .eight88
Shuang Xi (Double Happiness)
Fu (Good Fortune)
Hao Yuen (Good Luck)
Hao (Good)
Xing Yun (Fortune, riches)
For example, eventually one TLD will consist of
.BaBaBa (or .eight88) and its chinese character equivalent, so that the
registrant of a domain name may represent their name as either
chinesename.BaBaBa or chinesename.[Chinese characters for 888] as the
particular location, audience or occasion suggests. A domain name registrant
could thus have its name in Chinese characters with the Chinese characters for
the gTLD on one side of a business card and the Anglicised name and Anglicised
gTLD name on the other.
The relevant characters are set out in the schedule
to this application.
The applicant appreciates that software will need to
be developed to enable the root servers to recognise the Chinese characters as
identifying the relevant TLDs. This process is not unduly complex and is
already in hand.
E3. Naming conventions. Describe the naming
conventions and structure within the TLD. E.g., will registrants have names
registered at the second level (directly under the TLD, as in registered‑name.com),
or will the TLD be organized with sub‑domains so that registered domain
names are created at a lower level (as in registered‑name.travel.com)?
Domain names will be delegated at the second level
directly to end-user registrants. It is anticipated that the majority of
registrations will be of words or names in Chinese characters.
E5.5. Are you proposing any
special protections (other than during the start‑up period) for famous
trademarks?
No. Due to the nature of the TLDs it is felt
that such protections will be unnecessary. The applicants are however prepared
to meet any request by ICANN in this regard.
II. REGISTRATION POLICIES DURING THE START‑UP
PERIOD (Required for all TLDs)
E11. In this section, you should thoroughly describe
all policies (including implementation details) that you propose to follow
during the start‑up phase of registrations in the TLD, to the extent they
differ from the General TLD Policies covered in items E1‑E9. The
following questions highlight some of the areas that should be considered for
start‑up policies:
E12. How do you propose to address the potential
rush for registration at the initial opening of the TLD? How many requested
registrations do you project will be received by the registry operator within
the first day, week, month, and quarter? What period do you believe should be
considered the TLD's "start‑up period," during which special
procedures should apply?
We believe that there will be enormous demand for
names in all of the proposed TLDs. Our predicted demand levels are shown in
schedule 3 to the application and Registry functionality will be robust at this
level and at levels considerably in excess of them. The registry will open
discussions with potential registrars in Chinese speaking locations immediately
following the lodging of this application. As the burden of managing the retail
face of registrations will fall on registrars, they will need to be prepared
for extremely high volumes at start up.
E13. Do you propose to place limits on the number of
registrations per registrant? Per registrar? If so, how will these limits be
implemented?
No. We do
not believe it is appropriate or necessary to place limitations upon the number
of registrations per registrar at any time.
E14. Will pricing mechanisms be used to dampen a
rush for registration at the initial opening of the TLD? If so, please describe
these mechanisms in detail.
No. The Registry wishes to establish its reputation
from the outset as a registry which prices at economic cost. An initial pricing
mechanism by the registry would distort this message. Registrars may however
adopt initial pricing policies, especially in relation to non automated
transactions, in order to manage their own capacity. With respect to automated
transactions, the applicant does not foresee a need for Registrars to use
initial pricing to temper demand, but that is a decision for them.
E15. Will you offer any "sunrise period"
in which certain potential registrants are offered the opportunity to register
before registration is open to the general public? If so, to whom will this
opportunity be offered (those with famous marks, registered trademarks, second‑level
domains in other TLDs, pre‑registrations of some sort, etc.)? How will
you implement this?
No. However the applicant would be prepared to
accept an ICANN direction or expression of view if it were to the contrary of
the applicant’s position.
III. REGISTRATION RESTRICTIONS (Required for
restricted TLDs only)
E16. As noted in the New TLD Application Process
Overview, a restricted TLD is one with enforced restrictions on (1) who may
apply for a registration within the domain, (2) what uses may be made of those
registrations, or (3) both. In this section, please describe in detail the
restrictions you propose to apply to the TLD. Your description should define
the criteria to be employed, the manner in which you propose they be enforced,
and the consequences of violation of the restrictions. Examples of matters that
should be addressed are:
E17. Describe in detail the criteria for
registration in the TLD. Provide a full explanation of the reasoning behind the
specific policies chosen.
Initial registration is open to all entities. The registry may later, at its discretion,
deny registration in the TLDs to any parties known or thought to have violated
the registry’s policies in the past.
Due to the nature of the registry/registrar model it is unlikely that
the registry would enforce such a denial at the level of initial registration
(since the registrar deals with the identification of the registrant rather
than the registry).
E18. Describe the application process for potential
registrants in the TLD.
Potential registrants may apply through
participating ICANN approved registrars. Where there are insufficient ICANN
approved registrars in particular locations, the registry will take active
steps to encourage appropriate industry professionals in Chiense language areas
to seek ICANN approval.
IV. CONTEXT OF THE TLD WITHIN THE DNS (Required for
all TLDs)
E22. This section is intended to allow you to
describe the benefits of the TLD and the reasons why it would benefit the
global Internet community or some segment of that community. Issues you might
consider addressing include:
E23. What will distinguish the TLD from existing or
other proposed TLDs? How will this distinction be beneficial?
The TLDs will be the only Chinese language specific
TLDs. Their availability will fill a major gap in the existing DNS. The TLDs
will enable suffixes which have meaning to Chinese speakers to be available for
the first time. The availability of the TLDs will respect in a manner not
currently available the right of Chinese speaking stakeholders to have domain
name suffixes which are not dictated by a foreign language and which do not
have any meaning in Chinese. There is no legitimate basis for the DNS to
continue to deny to such a large group their right, once it becomes technically
feasible, as it now is, to have TLDs which have meaning in their native
tongues. This proposal seeks to give practical recognition to the legitimate
argument that the English language dominance of the DNS is a form of non
consensual colonisation which can now no longer be justified by grounds of
technical necessity.
E24. What community and/or market will be served or
targeted by this TLD? To what extent is that community or market already served
by the DNS?
The market consists of Chinese language businesses
and individuals which wish to have doman names in TLDs which have meaning to Chinese
speakers. The market is not well served at present as all existing TLDs are
English based.
E25. Please describe in detail how your proposal
would enable the DNS to meet presently unmet needs.
The proposal makes available to Chinese TLDs which
are regarded as important and for which no present solution exists.
E26. How would the introduction of the TLD enhance
the utility of the DNS for Internet users? For the community served by the TLD?
The TLDs would make available for the first time
TLDs which had a significance to Chinese speakers. Within the markets at which
they are directed, these TLDs can be expected to attract higher demand that
that generated by those markets for .com and .net.
By definition, any TLDs which were more in demand in
substantial communities than .com or .net would be justified by the weight of
that demand.
E27. How would the proposed TLD enhance competition
in domain‑name registration services, including competition with existing
TLD registries?
The proposed TLDs will offer a unique Chinese
language product which has powerful competitive advantages in Chinese speaking
markets over .com and .net. In addition,
registration will be available at long term economic cost. The fact that
the registry would not operate a registrar function means that the allocation
of the TLDs on these terms would represent a superior competition model to that
under which .COM, .NET and .ORG currently operate.
V. VALUE OF PROPOSAL AS A PROOF OF CONCEPT (Required
for all TLDs)
E28. Recent experience in the introduction of new
TLDs is limited in some respects. The current program of establishing new TLDs
is intended to allow evaluation of possible additions and enhancements to the
DNS and possible methods of implementing them. Stated differently, the current
program is intended to serve as a "proof of concept" for ways in
which the DNS might evolve in the longer term. This section of the application
is designed to gather information regarding what specific concept(s) could be
evaluated if the proposed TLD is introduced, how you propose the evaluation
should be done, and what information would be learned that might be instructive
in the long‑term management of the DNS. Well‑considered and
articulated responses to this section will be positively viewed in the
selection process. Matters you should discuss in this section include:
E29. What concepts are likely to be proved/disproved
by evaluation of the introduction of this TLD in the manner you propose?
The concepts likely to be
proved/disproved by empirical experience of the proposed TLDS include:
-
the
demand for foreign language TLDs;
-
the
price elasticity of demand for domain names;
-
the
comparative demand for foreign language
TLDs as compared with the demand for .com and .net in the particular foreign
language community;
-
the
demand for domain names in foreign language TLDS which also may be printed or
used in English language version for non foreign language speakers.
E30. How do you propose that the results of the
introduction should be evaluated? By what criteria should the success or lack
of success of the TLD be evaluated?
We consider that the results of the introduction
should be assessed by criteria which include the following:
-
Do
the TLDs enjoy high levels of demand;
-
Does
the demand for the TLDs justify the conclusion that there is a public need for
foreign language TLDs;
-
Are
domain names in the TLDs price competitive with other TLDs;
-
Has
the Registry adopting of cost based pricing led to either or both increased
demand or competitive response from other TLDs.
E31. In what way would the results of the evaluation
assist in the long‑range management of the DNS?
The results of the evaluation would provide valuable
information in relation to the demand for foreign language TLDs and in relation
to the demand for cost based pricing of registry services. The evaluation would
also provide useful lessons in the extent to which the absence of vertical
integration associated with the registry function enhances the competitive
environment.
E32. Are there any reasons other than evaluation of
the introduction process that this particular TLD should be included in the
initial introduction?
These TLDs should be introduced now because the
Chinese language community have a right to TLDs in their own language.
Only a very limited number of firms have the
necessary skill set and resources to guarantee the successful implementation
and management of any TLD and this increases the importance of the decision to
allocate a TLD during the initial introduction.
Our intention is to create foreign language TLD and
price competition models which set the industry standard in both of these
crucially important areas. The applicant aspires to a reputation as the leading
provider of innovative solutions to hitherto unexplored DNS potential as an
instrument of growth whilst at the same time respecting (by preserving and
enhancing) cultural, regional and linguistic traditions.
SCHEDULE 4
xxx and .sex
(separate
gTLDs)
Description of TLD Policies
I. E1. In General. Please provide a full and
detailed description of all policies to be followed in the TLD (other than
those covered in response to items E11‑E21). If the TLD's policy on a
particular topic is proposed to be identical to that reflected by a particular
version of any of the following documents, it is sufficient for your response
to identify the topic, to give a brief summary of the policy, and for the
details to reference the document and section:
Registrants must also accept and comply with the registry policies as follows:
1.
Registrants
shall ensure that access to web pages accessible via a URL containing a domain
within .xxx/.sex and containing material of a sexual nature shall be
effectively restricted to persons above the minimum age prescribed by the law
applicable in the place (“viewer’s location”) with where the ISP serving the person seeking access is
located and shall be restricted to material which may be lawfully viewed by
adults in the viewer’s location. The age restriction shall operate by means of
an initial page which cannot be passed through except upon the establishment of
proof of age where age is relevant to the lawfulness of viewing explicit
material under the law of the viewer’s location and by procedures which ensure
that pages which contain material which may not be lawfully viewed under the
law of the viewer’s location are not visible to viewers in that location.
The Registry shall create and manage systems to
ensure that an automated database
lookup which will provide registrants with the necessary information concerning
the location of ISPs is made available to registrants for a fee. The fee shall
be based upon long run incremental cost principles (audited annually by the
auditor referred to in paragraph 3 below) and, for the first two years, shall
be based on the registry’s reasonable estimate of the likely long run
incremental price, based upon independent expert advice. Audit costs shall be
treated as part of the system costs. A registrant which establishes to the
Registry that it has an efficient and alternative means for ascertaining the
location of a viewer’s ISP shall not be bound to use the registry’s service.
2. Proof of age shall include a credit card, and/or
where made available by the state, driver’s licence or ID records (eg social
security number) which correspond with the database maintained by the state or
by such other means as the Registry shall from time to time identify.
3. The accounting firm of Ormsby-Rhodes (“the
auditor”, which term shall include an person deputised by Ormsby-Rhodes to
actually conduct the audit), Dublin, a division of BKR is appointed to audit
the compliance of registrants with the Registry rules. The auditor shall
establish and may from time to time vary, both establishment and variation to
be with the consent of the registry or in the event of disagreement, with the
consent of the Chief Executive of ICANN, and shall make public on the website
of the registry, rules for the conduct of such audits. The auditor shall
conduct an audit of the web sites and relevant practices of any registrant
where:
a.
the
registry requests the auditor to conduct an audit;
b.
any
competent authority of government in the place of a viewer’s location makes a
complaint in writing to the auditor that a registrant has on more than five
occasions within a period of one month
permitted viewing contrary to the law of the viewer’s location in
respect of matters which are not trivial;
c.
any
court of competent jurisdiction in the place of a viewer’s location issues an
order directing a registrant to prohibit the accessibility of specified
material in the place of a viewer’s location or an order.
4. The auditor shall report the results of its audit
to the registry together with a recommendation, which may include suspension or
cancellation of the registration.
5. The auditor shall be entitled to have its
reasonable costs of audit paid by the person complaining where the complaint is
not made out and by the registrant where the complaint is made out. Any
unrecovered costs of audit shall be met in the first instance by the Registry
and shall form part of the costs of the Registry.
5. The Registry may suspend the operation of any
domain name where it receives a verified complaint by the police or a public
enforcement authority that a web page associated with the domain name contains
material unlawful under the law of a place and which has been made available to
persons in breach of clause 1. Such
suspension may be continued for 3 months or for such further time as a court of
competent jurisdiction may direct.
6. The Registry may cancel the domain name
registration for any domain name where a Court of competent jurisdiction has so
ordered or where an arbitration under clause 5 has so ordered.
7. The Registry shall suspend or cancel registration
where a recommendation to do so has been received from the auditor.
8. A person who is affected may bring a complaint
concerning a breach of clause 1 before an ICANN approved arbitrator and such an
arbitrator shall conduct an arbitration concerning the question of breach,
which arbitration shall be conducted in accordance with WIPO rules.
The purpose of the rules is to establish and
administer a regime for the presentation to the Internet community of sexually
explicit material in a manner which as nearly as can be complies with the laws
of the country of the viewer and which facilitates the prevention of access to
such material by minors.
E2. TLD String. Please identify the TLD string(s)
you are proposing. For format requirements for TLD strings, see the answer to
FAQ #5.
.xxx and .sex (separate gTLDs)
E3. Naming conventions. Describe the naming
conventions and structure within the TLD. E.g., will registrants have names
registered at the second level (directly under the TLD, as in registered‑name.com),
or will the TLD be organized with sub‑domains so that registered domain
names are created at a lower level (as in registered‑name.travel.com)?
Domain names will be delegated at the second level
directly to end-user registrants.
Eg.
adultwebsite.xxx / adultwebsite.sex
Registrars are not required to actively enforce TLD
policies however they are required to make registrants aware of the TLD
policies and it is the responsibility of the registrar to ensure that registrants
agree to these policies. The registry
will enforce the policies as described.
II. REGISTRATION POLICIES DURING THE START‑UP
PERIOD (Required for all TLDs)
E11. In this section, you should thoroughly describe
all policies (including implementation details) that you propose to follow
during the start‑up phase of registrations in the TLD, to the extent they
differ from the General TLD Policies covered in items E1‑E9. The
following questions highlight some of the areas that should be considered for
start‑up policies:
E12. How do you propose to address the potential
rush for registration at the initial opening of the TLD? How many requested
registrations do you project will be received by the registry operator within
the first day, week, month, and quarter? What period do you believe should be
considered the TLD's "start‑up period," during which special
procedures should apply?
We believe that there will be a significant rush for
the allocation of certain “desirable” domain names. For the initial period of
three months all registrations will be held in escrow. All domain names shall
be released from escrow at the expiration of three months, except domain names
the subject of a complaint as described below. If before the period of three
months has expired the Registry receives verified evidence that a person (“the
claimant”) other than the registrant was on 30 September 2000 the owner of an
identical domain name in .com or .net which carried at that date an active
webpage from which the person was carrying on business, then following notice
to the registrant and the auditor, the Registry shall, if the auditor so
recommends, cancel the registration and refund the price to the registrant. The
Registrar shall allot the domain name to the claimant. If the Registrar does
not recommend cancellation, the domain name shall be released from escrow. The
demand assumptions are set out in schedule 6 to the application and the
registry will be robust at these levels and at levels considerably higher.
There are several objectives for this portion of the
proposal. It is intended to faciliate established operators of sexually
explicit sites to register the domain names which are identical to the names
they already hold in other gTLDs. This in turn is calculated to facilitate the
task of governments which wish to mandate a migration of sexually explicit
sites to the new gTLDs. It is not expected that this will happen immediately.
It will not happen at all in many places. But it is a real prospect in some
countries that legislation would be enacted which provided that only those
sexually explicit sites which were in the new gTLDs should be lawfully capable
of being viewed or published in the country enacting the law. The public policy
behind such a law might be that collecting all sexually explicit sites under
dedicated gTLDs would render the task of screening much easier, both at the
state and family levels.
The applicants consider that, given the
opportunities which the proposed gTLDs offer for more effective regulation,
fairness considerations suggest that existing operators should be afforded the
opportunity to register existing domain names in the new TLDs so as to avoid
any risk of loss in the event that migration were to be mandated in any
jurisdiction.
E15. Will you offer any "sunrise period"
in which certain potential registrants are offered the opportunity to register
before registration is open to the general public? If so, to whom will this
opportunity be offered (those with famous marks, registered trademarks, second‑level
domains in other TLDs, pre‑registrations of some sort, etc.)? How will
you implement this?
No. The escrow proposals meet these objectives.
III. REGISTRATION RESTRICTIONS (Required for
restricted TLDs only)
E16. As noted in the New TLD Application Process
Overview, a restricted TLD is one with enforced restrictions on (1) who may
apply for a registration within the domain, (2) what uses may be made of those
registrations, or (3) both. In this section, please describe in detail the restrictions
you propose to apply to the TLD. Your description should should define the
criteria to be employed, the manner in which you propose they be enforced, and
the consequences of violation of the restrictions. Examples of matters that
should be addressed are:
E17. Describe in detail the criteria for
registration in the TLD. Provide a full explanation of the reasoning behind the
specific policies chosen.
Initial registration is open to all entities,
subject to the escrow provisions. The
registry may later, at its discretion, deny registration in the TLD to any
parties known or thought to have violated the registry’s policies in the
past. Due to the nature of the
registry/registrar model it is unlikely that the registry would enforce such a
denial at the level of initial registration (since the registrar deals with the
identification of the registrant rather than the registry).
E18. Describe the application process for potential
registrants in the TLD.
Potential registrants may apply through participating
ICANN approved registrars.
E19. Describe the enforcement procedures and
mechanisms for ensuring registrants meet the registration requirements.
It is proposed that the application process be
conducted in a manner similar to that for the existing gTLDs. That is, without enforcement of specific
rules.
E20. Describe any appeal process from denial of
registration.
Should the registry introduce vetting procedures
which result in the approval or denial of registrations as applications are
processed at first instance the registry will, in conjunction with ICANN and
any relevant bodies, including the proposed auditor, introduce procedures which
allow the registrant the right of appeal against any denial. The registry would be required to
demonstrate the reasonable connection between the applicant entity and any
entity known to have previously breached registry policies in a material
manner.
E21. Describe any procedure that permits third
parties to seek cancellation of a TLD registration for failure to comply with
restrictions.
See section E1 which describes abilities of not only
law enforcement bodies / courts to issue appropriate documentation to the
registry but also the right of a third party individual or interest group to
lodge a complaint with an appropriately qualified mediator.
IV. CONTEXT OF THE TLD WITHIN THE DNS (Required for
all TLDs)
E22. This section is intended to allow you to
describe the benefits of the TLD and the reasons why it would benefit the
global Internet community or some segment of that community. Issues you might
consider addressing include:
E23. What will distinguish the TLD from existing or
other proposed TLDs? How will this distinction be beneficial?
The TLD will be distinct from existing TLDs due to
the likely nature of content which it is designed to accommodate. This distinction will be beneficial since it
will allow the distribution of such content to be effectively controlled.
E24. What community and/or market will be served or
targeted by this TLD? To what extent is that community or market already served
by the DNS?
We feel that the introduction of this TLD will have
the effect of serving the needs of all Internet users. Whilst adult site operators will be the
largest group of registrants the benefit provided by the registry’s service is
far broader. To the extent that this
TLD fulfills both the needs of adult website operators and Internet users
(particularly sensitive groups such as children or religiously/morally opposed
persons) we feel that this proposal offers a service unique to that provided by
existing gTLD / ccTLD delegations.
E25. Please describe in detail how your proposal
would enable the DNS to meet presently unmet needs.
Our proposal offers advantages to all key
stakeholders:
-
Adult
website operators are able to disseminate information in an effective manner to
their target audience
-
Appropriately
verified adult website viewers are able to easily locate content which falls
into this category
-
Children
and other sensitive persons are adequately protected from accidental or
unintended exposure to such materials
-
Law
enforcement bodies and other authorities are able to take effective action
against breaches of local law
-
Governments
may enact legislation appropriate to their cultural heritage and social climate
which defines a balance between the rights of citizens and the need to observe
appropriate viewing practices
E26. How would the introduction of the TLD enhance
the utility of the DNS for Internet users? For the community served by the TLD?
The delegation of
.xxx and .sex and their management under the terms of this proposal
would make additional functionality available to search engines, browser
software, content filtering utilities and the like. This functionality serves dual purposes and has the effect of
benefitting the community at large as well as Internet users interested in
accessing materials within the TLDs or operating websites within the TLDs.
E27. How would the proposed TLD enhance competition
in domain‑name registration services, including competition with existing
TLD registries?
By making registration available at long term
economic cost and due the fact that the registry would not operate (beyond the
initial sunrise period) a registrar function (except if the number of ICANN
approved registrars should fall below a minimum level required to maintain
reasonable levels of competition – such number to be determined by the registry
in conjunction with ICANN but to be no less than 1000 registrars) the
allocation of the TLD on these terms would represent a superior competition
model to that under which .COM, .NET and .ORG currently operate.
Additionally by increasing the available namespace
and ability for registrars to participate the delegation of these TLDs would
represent a significant competitive advantage as compared to the existing DNS
structure.
V. VALUE OF PROPOSAL AS A PROOF OF CONCEPT (Required
for all TLDs)
E28. Recent experience in the introduction of new
TLDs is limited in some respects. The current program of establishing new TLDs
is intended to allow evaluation of possible additions and enhancements to the
DNS and possible methods of implementing them. Stated differently, the current
program is intended to serve as a "proof of concept" for ways in
which the DNS might evolve in the longer term. This section of the application
is designed to gather information regarding what specific concept(s) could be
evaluated if the proposed TLD is introduced, how you propose the evaluation
should be done, and what information would be learned that might be instructive
in the long‑term management of the DNS. Well‑considered and
articulated responses to this section will be positively viewed in the
selection process. Matters you should discuss in this section include:
E29. What concepts are likely to be proved/disproved
by evaluation of the introduction of this TLD in the manner you propose?
-
The
desirability of TLDs dedicated to specific industry segments
-
The
application of DNS flexibility in resolving access issues
-
The
benefits provided to Internet users by enabling effective control/guidelines
over explicit material
-
The
benefits provided to Government / law enforcement bodies provided by effective
TLD policies applicable to specific community needs
Whilst we recognise that, in many ways, the
delegation of .sex and .xxx represents
a special case which, whilst possessing undisputable merit, may provide
valuable although not necessarily entirely universally applicable lessons we
feel that it warrants consideration not only for the obvious public benefits to
which it gives rise but also as an important test of the introduction of
competition into the provision of additional gTLDs.
Additionally due to the specific nature of this
proposal, particularly the aspects of the proposal relating to the long term
economic cost of domains, we feel that this TLD would be able to demonstrate
the importance of competition in respect of the allocation of domain names.
E30. How do you propose that the results of the
introduction should be evaluated? By what criteria should the success or lack
of success of the TLD be evaluated?
Obviously public comment is invited upon the success
or otherwise of the TLD and it’s management proposal however we caution ICANN
upon relying heavily on information submitted by interest groups either from
industries utilising the TLD (eg adult website operators) or from special
interest groups opposed to the publication of explicit materials on the
Internet in any form.
We believe that the entire Internet community
including such groups stands to benefit from the introduction of this TLD and
we feel that national Governments and citizens of all countries will benefit
from and give support to this TLD accordingly.
We believe that our proposal can be effectively
evaluated by a combination of feedback from these individuals and various
Governmental authorities and law enforcement bodies as well as through the
adoption of the utility which we feel this TLD will add to the DNS (eg the use
of the tld as a distinguishing factor in content filtering utilities as well as
search engines and indexes of site content).
E31. In what way would the results of the evaluation
assist in the long‑range management of the DNS?
The results of the evaluation in respect of
competition issues as well as the successful adoption of the TLD will give rise
to important lessons which will assist in the definition and adoption of
long-term management strategies for the DNS.
E32. Are there any reasons other than evaluation of
the introduction process that this particular TLD should be included in the
initial introduction?
The obvious public benefits which will result from
the implementation of this proposal in themselves represent, we feel,
sufficient reason to include this TLD in the initial introduction.
Only a very limited number of firms have the
necessary skill set and resources to guarantee the successful implementation
and management of any TLD and this increases the importance of the decision to
allocate a TLD during the initial introduction.
By delegating .xxx or .sex in favour of the
applicant registry we feel that ICANN is able to achieve not only direct public
benefit but additionally to test the feasibility of the introduction of
competition in this arena in a manner which guarantees stability and success.
Our intention is to create a competition model which
can be observed by future registry operators should the results of this
introduction demonstrate the need for allocation of future TLDs.
SCHEDULE 5
.afr and
.africa (to be administered as separate TLDs)
E2. TLD String. Please identify the TLD string(s)
you are proposing. For format requirements for TLD strings, see the answer to
FAQ #5.
.africa and
.afr (both to be operated as separate TLDs)
E3. Naming conventions. Describe the naming conventions
and structure within the TLD. E.g., will registrants have names registered at
the second level (directly under the TLD, as in registered‑name.com), or
will the TLD be organized with sub‑domains so that registered domain
names are created at a lower level (as in registered‑name.travel.com)?
Domain names will be delegated at the second level
(malawicrops.africa) directly to end-user registrants, with the exception of
the following:
a.
.gov/.govt.country
name.africa
b.
.edu/.ac.country
name.africa
which will be reserved for governments and academic
institutions of the country concerned and:
c.
.gov/govt.africa;
and
d.
edu/ac.africa
which will be reserved for pan African governmental
and academic institutions respectively; and
e.
countryname.africa
f.
.com.africa
and .co.africa
g.
.net.africa
h.
.org.africa
which will be reserved as sub-domains
The Registry will have the right to refuse, and
within thirty days of registration, cancel the registration of any domain name
which the Registry reasonably considers to convey a false representation of
association with a government, establishment or business.
II. REGISTRATION POLICIES DURING THE START‑UP
PERIOD (Required for all TLDs)
E11. In this section, you should thoroughly describe
all policies (including implementation details) that you propose to follow
during the start‑up phase of registrations in the TLD, to the extent they
differ from the General TLD Policies covered in items E1‑E9. The
following questions highlight some of the areas that should be considered for
start‑up policies:
E12. How do you propose to address the potential
rush for registration at the initial opening of the TLD? How many requested
registrations do you project will be received by the registry operator within
the first day, week, month, and quarter? What period do you believe should be
considered the TLD's "start‑up period," during which special
procedures should apply?
We do not consider that there will be an exceptional
initial rush, although the registry will be prepared for one. We estimate that
the demand for the TLD will grow as stakeholders learn of its superior
price/quality mix. Our estimates over the proposed four year life of the
appointment are contained in the schedule 5 to the application and fall well
within the proposed registry specification. The registry would be comfortably
able to handle registrations at many times this level.
III. REGISTRATION RESTRICTIONS (Required for
restricted TLDs only)
E16. As noted in the New TLD Application Process
Overview, a restricted TLD is one with enforced restrictions on (1) who may
apply for a registration within the domain, (2) what uses may be made of those
registrations, or (3) both. In this section, please describe in detail the
restrictions you propose to apply to the TLD. Your description should should
define the criteria to be employed, the manner in which you propose they be
enforced, and the consequences of violation of the restrictions. Examples of
matters that should be addressed are:
E19. Describe the enforcement procedures and
mechanisms for ensuring registrants meet the registration requirements.
It is proposed that the application process be
conducted in a manner similar to that for the existing gTLDs. That is, without enforcement of specific
rules.
E21. Describe any procedure that permits third
parties to seek cancellation of a TLD registration for failure to comply with
restrictions.
N/A.
IV. CONTEXT OF THE TLD WITHIN THE DNS (Required for
all TLDs)
E22. This section is intended to allow you to
describe the benefits of the TLD and the reasons why it would benefit the
global Internet community or some segment of that community. Issues you might
consider addressing include:
E23. What will distinguish the TLD from existing or
other proposed TLDs? How will this distinction be beneficial?
The TLD will designate a connection with the African
continent, rather than with a particular country. It will:
a.
overcome existing barriers to acquisition of an
African domain name;
b.
support
the emergence of the concept of a single African electronic commercial zone;
c.
access
economies of scale not available to African ccTLDs;
d.
bring
world’s lowest cost and best practice to African domain names.
E24. What community and/or market will be served or
targeted by this TLD? To what extent is that community or market already served
by the DNS?
The TLD will serve the needs of African businesses
and individuals. It will tend to foster and focus commerce which has an African
connection. The African community is not currently well served by cc TLDs.
E25. Please describe in detail how your proposal
would enable the DNS to meet presently unmet needs.
Our proposal offers advantages to all key
stakeholders. It will overcome existing
barriers to acquisition of an African domain name, support the emergence of the
concept of a single African electronic commercial zone, access economies of
scale not available to African ccTLDs and bring world’s lowest cost and best
practice to African domain names. Our proposal will promote the emergence of
pan African electronic commerce and be a source of pressure for minimisation of
the complications represented by having a large number of extremely poor
countries most of which are unable individually to make significant progress
towards economic progress by recourse to internet assisted commerce and
information exchange.
E26. How would the introduction of the TLD enhance
the utility of the DNS for Internet users? For the community served by the TLD?
The proposal will bring the world’s cheapest and
best practice registry functionality to the continent which needs it most.
E27. How would the proposed TLD enhance competition
in domain‑name registration services, including competition with existing
TLD registries?
By making registration available at long term economic
cost and due to the fact that the registry would not operate a registrar
function, the allocation of the TLD on these terms would represent a markedly
superior competition model to that under which African cc TLDs and .com, .net and .org currently operate.
Additionally by increasing the available namespace
and ability for registrars to participate in a manner which optimises the
opportunities and incentives for competitive conduct, the delegation of these
TLDs would deliver a significant competitive advantage over the existing DNS
structure.
V. VALUE OF PROPOSAL AS A PROOF OF CONCEPT (Required
for all TLDs)
E28. Recent experience in the introduction of new
TLDs is limited in some respects. The current program of establishing new TLDs
is intended to allow evaluation of possible additions and enhancements to the
DNS and possible methods of implementing them. Stated differently, the current
program is intended to serve as a "proof of concept" for ways in
which the DNS might evolve in the longer term. This section of the application
is designed to gather information regarding what specific concept(s) could be
evaluated if the proposed TLD is introduced, how you propose the evaluation
should be done, and what information would be learned that might be instructive
in the long‑term management of the DNS. Well‑considered and
articulated responses to this section will be positively viewed in the
selection process. Matters you should discuss in this section include:
E29. What concepts are likely to be proved/disproved
by evaluation of the introduction of this TLD in the manner you propose?
The concepts which we consider are likely to be
proved/disproved by evaluation of the introduction of the TLD proposed include:
-
The
comparative welfare effects of registries compelled by their charters and
structure and resulting economic incentives to maximise competition;
-
The
extent to which demand for domain names exhibits price elasticity;
-
The
economic viability of a registrar seeking shareholder value by means other than
price maximisation;
-
The
desirability of TLDs dedicated to a continental group of countries where
individual countries are extremely deficient in economic resources;
-
The
application of DNS flexibility in resolving access issues;
We consider that the proposal offers an opportunity
not capable of replication in the “physical” world of providing a structure
which portrays the African continent as a single internet location and which
provides an engine for change not capable of replication by any other known feasible
means. The opportunity is not merely cost free to the African community and to
the rest of the world, but because it harnesses world’s best practice and
lowest cost, its introduction achieves negative cost.
We consider that the economic case for the new TLD
is overwhelming. We believe that the only real issue for evaluation is whether
the registry will be viable and whether the applicant has sufficient technical
capacity to ensure its robustness. We believe that an affirmative conclusion on
both issues is irresistible.
E30. How do you propose that the results of the
introduction should be evaluated? By what criteria should the success or lack
of success of the TLD be evaluated?
We suggest that the criteria for assessment should
include:
-
Has
the TLD lowered the price for which African related domain names can be
acquired;
-
Has
the TLD increased the efficiency for the provision of African related TLDs;
-
Has
the TLD had the promotional effect of
increasing awareness of and utilisation of African commerce and information
exchange;
-
Has
the TLD been a successful model for the use of DNS functionality to promote
economic and information exchange in undeveloped areas where the physical
promotion of such outcomes is exceedingly difficult;
-
Has
the introduction of the TLD resulted in a net economic benefit.
We consider that the very articulation of these
criteria powerfully indicates that the risk of a conclusion of failure is
extremely remote.
E31. In what way would the results of the evaluation
assist in the long‑range management of the DNS?
The results will teach whether and to what extend
DNS policy can be an instrument for the promotion of economic welfare in
undeveloped areas.
The results of the evaluation in respect of
competition issues as well as the successful adoption of the TLD will give rise
to important lessons which will assist in the definition and adoption of
long-term management strategies for the DNS. In particular, the prospect is
that the experience of the TLD will provide a very powerful case for the
establishment as industry standard of cost based domain name pricing.
E32. Are there any reasons other than evaluation of
the introduction process that this particular TLD should be included in the
initial introduction?
The public
benefits which will result from the implementation of this proposal in
themselves represent, we feel, sufficient reason to include this TLD in the
initial introduction.
Only a very limited number of firms have the
necessary skill set and resources to guarantee the successful implementation
and management of any TLD and this increases the importance of the decision to
allocate a TLD during the initial introduction.
Our ambition for this TLD is to create the model for
domain name policy in undeveloped areas and by that means to position the
applicant as the world’s leader in the achievement of DNS based strategies for
economic and information exchange growth in the third world.