The Kids' Place on the Web!
Creating
an Engaging, Exciting, and
Relevant Presence on the Internet for Children
E1.
General
E2. TLD String
E3. Naming Conventions
E4. Registrars
E5. Intellectual Property
E6. Dispute Resolution
E7. Data, Privacy, Escrow and Whois
E8. Billing and Collection
E9. Services and Pricing
E10. Other Policies
II. Registration Policies During the Start-Up Period
E11.
Start-Up Period
E12. Rush for Registration
E13. Limits
E14. Pricing During Rush
E15. Sunrise Period
III. Registration Restrictions
E16.
General Registration
E17. Criteria for Registration
E18. Application Process
E19. Enforcement Procedures
E20. Appeal Process
IV. Context of the TLD within the DNS
E22.
Benefits of .kids
E23. Distinguishing Features of .kids
E24. Target Market
E25. Meeting Developing Needs of the DNS
E26. Enhancing the Utility of the DNS
E27. Enhancing Competition for Domain Name Registration
V. Value of Proposal as a Proof of Concept
E29.
Concepts to be Proved or Disproved by introducing .kids
E30. Evaluating Results
E31. Long Range Value of Results
E32. Other Reasons to include .kids
T |
oday’s children use the
Internet in ever increasing numbers. They
explore it. They learn from it.
They form associations from and with it.
And, they are now helping to build it.
The proliferation of personal computers and access to the Internet from
the home and from within the educational system has given rise to an online
generation. Unfortunately, at
this time many Internet sites are not designed for kids, not targeted for a
child audience, and many contain material that is far from suited or
appropriate for children. The
Internet is currently like a vast unsorted library; a Dr. Suess book may be on
the shelf next to a pornographic magazine; a set of children’s encyclopedias
rests against a hate manifesto. One
mistyped letter can redirect a child doing his homework towards an education
that he/she is not prepared for. Students
are turned into voyeurs. Playtime
is unsupervised. Leadership is
absent.
.KIDS
Domains, Inc. herein applies to sponsor and administer a new Top Level Domain
Name, .kids. In partnership with
Tucows Corporation, our registry operator, .kids will provide a safe and
engaging “greenspace” environment for children. We will segment the DNS
system, to the benefit of the Internet Community, by intentionally creating
sites where children, parents and institutions can rely on a greater level of
adherence to the laws, findings of policy boards, and the regulations imposed
by SROs that currently exist to protect children.
The
restrictive measures offered by filtering systems have so far been unable to
satisfy parents and guardians concerned about their children’s exposure to
the entire Internet. Currently
it’s a one-size-fits-all Internet and asking the “.com” world to deliver
content to all audiences in all voices is foolish.
Attempts to do so have made some sites too complex, reducing the
relevancy of the content they deliver to their desired constituency.
A
registry of .kids domain addresses will help those institutions and parents
who want to, and have the right to, make choices for children. In addition, by
educating and building a community of content providers who are delivering
content specifically for children, children
are empowered to make their own choices at the keyboard level.
Today’s youth will
become empowered to seek out the wonderful educational, entertainment
oriented, and communication experiences the World Wide Web has to offer.
Educating
our registrants as to the existing laws and policies that apply to this most
important constituency of the Internet community will be our first priority.
While we do not seek out authority to decide what any child may or may
not see or do, we do plan to form a binding private contractual relationship
with our domain name registrants. By
executing the agreement, registrants will deliver .KIDS Domains, Inc. the
authority to uphold and enforce a standard for the suitability and
appropriateness of content on all sites in the .kids network.
.KIDS
Domains, Inc will require more education, at the point of registration and
registration renewal, as to what is currently, and in the future, deemed legal
to do on the Internet (at any site) in the US and in the countries most likely
making-up the website audience.
To
further ensure adherence to our Terms of Use and the “Guidelines for the
Publishing of Content and Use of .KIDS Domain Space” (“Guidelines”), we
will require annual audits (see E10, Description
of TLD Policies) of website content and appropriateness. This will range
from an updated single page self administered audit for personal and family
sites to a more thorough independent audit of larger and “high risk”
sites.
We
will update the Terms of Use and the “Guidelines” each year as the
applicable laws and recognized policies regarding children and the Internet
change. .KIDS Domains, Inc. also
anticipates that the Terms of Use and “Guidelines” will change and evolve
as technology continues to improve.
We
look forward to working with ICANN, the Internet community, the existing and
future pioneers of browser and filtering software, private and public
nonprofit groups, and legislative bodies and commissions already developing
strategies to meet the needs of kids and parents.
We
will work in conjunction with existing watchdog groups and software developers
to increase the level of adherence to existing content and decency laws.
We believe that the existence of a .kids tld, as proposed in this
application, with the standardized guidelines regarding content publication,
will serve to make watchdog group more effective (when their efforts are
focused within the .kids network).
In
addition to the audit process, one way .KIDS Domains, Inc. may work with
watchdog groups would be implementing a scoring process.
Sites that are randomly visited, may receive a score out of 100, and a
score of 70 or below would put the site on 30 day notice to bring the site
back up to the standards set by the Terms of Use. Of course, gross violators
of the policies, set forth by .KIDS Domains, Inc., will be shut down
immediately.
.KIDS
Domains seeks at the forefront to protect the existing stability of the DNS
system. At all times we will vigorously strive to promote technology standards
that are open, non-proprietary, and fully compatible with the Internet's
existing end-to-end model and that preserve globally unique naming in a
universally resolvable public name space.
Through
our registry operator .KIDS Domains, Inc. will accept registrations for domain
names in a manner protecting current trademark.. We plan to offer domain name applicants as fair a chance as
possible to operate Internet sites using the .kids extension. We are targeting
our policies toward those applicants who own and operate personal, family
business and commercial venues using their registered domain names, and
therefore will strictly require the presence of an operating site on .kids
domain addresses within 120 days of registration.
We have devised a four-step
registration process to deal with the anticipated pent up demand for sites
that target children. This phased
approach to the initial distribution of .kids domains to owners who have a
legal right to the extension, owners who wish to do commercial business using
the extension, and business owners seeking to use the Internet to provide
children with a more enjoyable and appropriate Internet experience, will allow
the registry operator to handle claims over a one-year period.
In
order to describe the policies of .KIDS Domains, Inc. we must first look at
the current uses of the Net and the implications for children. Most sites for
companies and corporations under the .com name serve multi-faceted purposes.
Sites are created to sell products and services; and provide
information to customers and other stakeholders, such as, employees, vendors
and governmental agencies. Increasingly, customer service, billing, financial
transactions, and marketing is being done on the Internet through these
websites.
Much
of the experience that is the essence of and offered on the Net does not
specifically and effectively engage children. While freedom of speech is at
the core of the Internet, much of the alternative information represented on
the Internet is not suitable or appropriate for children under the age of 18.
Parents, who would like to guide their children’s introduction and
experience on the Internet, have been searching for options to protect their
children from inappropriate information and advances using this electronic
medium. Government bodies and commissions have also been reviewing the
existing technology solutions to help this process.
To date, parents have been
able to buy software that is able to restrict their access to a specific
series of sites, however, the Internet changes at such a rapid pace that these
products are unable to keep up with the constant addition of sites
inappropriate for viewing by children. In
addition, we believe that in many cases these tools encourage the creation of
dubious measures to bypass the restrictive measures.
Software
solutions have not proven as effective as their supporters have promised
because many children have found ways around them, or specific sites have been
written in such a way that the preventative software does not work.
(See attachment in Appendix A)
In
addition, sites that contain no inappropriate content are sometimes blocked
because their domain name address contains a word that has several
connotations. For instance, some
filtering technologies, when set to the highest sensitivity, will not allow
access to fantasyfootball.com because it contains the word ‘fantasy’.
The .kids platform will remove a great deal of the ambiguity caused by
dual connotations, simply because the only acceptable use of a given word will
be in the child appropriate sense.
In developing the .kids
platform of websites that meet a standardized and uniform set of guidelines,
the potential effectiveness of existing filtering and child-safety software
tools will be dramatically enhanced. .KIDS
Domains, Inc. will actively engage these filtering and child protection
software companies to promote a more effective development of their products.
While .KIDS Domains, Inc. seeks
first to promote a network of sites that are engaging and relevant enough that
most children will opt for the ‘.kids version’ of a corporate site, we do
anticipate that filtering software companies will develop features within
their products that will allow parents to restrict their children to only
.kids websites.
At
the same time, new marketing techniques, potentially violating the privacy
rights of adult users, have been introduced. While the Internet community has
been active in addressing the abuses of some of the marketing industry
practices, we feel children may be especially susceptible to such practices.
As those practices may abide by the letters of the law designed to
protect privacy, they have been manipulated or interpreted in such a manner
that they infringe upon the rights of privacy for children and their parents.
Applicants for domain names
would be restricted as to the content and marketing practices they can use for
sites bearing the .kids TLD.
In
this application process, ICANN has asked us to introduce creative solutions
to the problems currently existing in the areas of trademark protection,
non-user speculations and other issues affecting the domain name registration
process. Throughout this document
we hope to prove that, not only can .KIDS Domains, Inc. creatively solve these
problems, but is also well equipped to implement the unfolding of these
resolutions.
We
believe ICANN is currently presented with a unique and special opportunity to
make a historic decision to benefit children now and in the future, all across
the world.
We
look forward to joining efforts in pioneering news ways to allocate domain
names.
General
TLD Policies
Acknowledged.
The TLD string proposed is
.kids. If the intent of ICANN is
to have a 3 letter extension, such as .kid, .we will readily make the
appropriate changes in our application.
The naming convention will
have registrants registering names at the second level and not organize with
the sub-domains to create webs at a lower level.
.KIDS Domains, Inc. commends ICANN
for allowing multiple registrars for .com, .net, and .org domain names and can
see obvious benefits of the creation of a price-competitive environment in the
domain registration industry. However,
because .kids will be a restricted TLD, .KIDS Domains, Inc. does not intend to
allow other registrars to register .kids domain names.
Initially, keeping a closed
environment will allow for a more effective and productive development setting
for standardizing the policies for registration, content publishing and for
evaluating procedures for the administration of a new restricted, specialized
TLD. Once controls for the integrity of the .kids domain-name registration
process can be established and stabilized, the use of other registrars will be
considered.
During the start-up period
.KIDS Domains, Inc. may work with interested registrars to develop link
partnership relationships, allowing outside registrars to refer customers
directly to the .KIDS registration site and registration process starting
point, while also providing a return link for customers to easily navigate
back to the referring registrar.
It
is the primary intent of .KIDS Domains, Inc. to maintain and continuously
update policies to protect the intellectual iroperty of others.
In general, the initial policies are intended to take advantage of the
efforts of countless individuals, advisory boards and committees who have formulated
policies already being implemented in the .com, .net, and
.org Top Level Domains (gTLDs). This
includes work such as IPC’s findings of August 24th, 2000.
One of the
powerful benefits that .KIDS Domains, Inc anticipates contributing to the
Internet community is the educating of registrants, website owners, and
visitors of .kids sites about the existing laws, rules, regulations, and
policies regarding not only the publication of content for the viewing of
children, but also on the use of domain names by mark holders and the rights
and titles that they have from an Intellectual Property perspective.
.KIDS
Domains, Inc. will implement the following policies:
1. A
policy to implement and maintain a Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy patterned
after the Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy as approved by ICANN on October
24, 1999.
2. Maintaining
an up-to-date "Whois" database having total public availability for
all .KIDS domain
registrations. The database will have a format that is readily
accessible by and can be integrated into existing "Whois" databases
for other gTLDs.
3. A
policy to implement any future Intellectual Property protection policies
recommended by ICANN or other appropriate authoritative body.
4. A
policy to maintain a dedicated, Staff Intellectual Property Advisor with the
responsibility of keeping current on developments in the domain name dispute
area and making periodic recommendations to changes in the intellectual
property policies. Duties shall include review of any proposals by the Domain
Name Support Organization (DNSO)
working committees and drafting responses to any recommendations by ICANN.
5. A
policy providing a "Sunrise Period" wherein trademark owners are
given an opportunity to register .kids domains corresponding
to their trademark before
such a domain is opened to the general public.
6. Policies
promoting the maintenance of an automated access database of both active and
inactive U.S. Federal Trademark Applications and Registrations. During the
.KIDS domain name
registration process, a
spot check will be done against this
database to determine whether the
domain exactly matches an
existing word mark in the database.
If so, a hold will be placed on the registration for a thirty-day
publication period.
7. A
policy promoting the establishment of an ICANN government liaison-working
group, which fosters greater interaction with the U.S. Patent and Trademark
Office wherein for a fee, the Patent and Trademark Office will provide an
authorization check against conflicting names.
Under such a system, owners of record of a conflicting mark would be
notified of applicant's intention to register the .kids domain and given
an opportunity (30
days) to submit an
objection whereupon the applicant may abandon
the application or submit
the matter to dispute resolution.
8.
Exploration of the use of “shared” pages.
.KIDS Domains, Inc. will explore the feasibility of the use of a shared
page when right to a particular domain name is disputed by “mark” holders.
Under this scenario, the disputed domain acts as a link page, listing
hyperlinks to the sites of the organizations that have claim to the domain in
question. (See Appendix B)
A policy to implement and
maintain a Uniform Dispute Resolution Policy patterned after the Uniform
Dispute Resolution Policy as approved by ICANN on October 24, 1999.
.KIDS
Domains, Inc. will employ a strict data privacy policy. Other than in the form
of the WHOIS service, the .KIDS Domains, Inc. registry information will not be
made available in any form to any party, except to ICANN and a third party
data escrow firm.
Third parties will not be
allowed to use this information for any reason unless disclosed, and agreed to
in advance by the domain-name owner. A declaration on the Whois service will
list the limitations of that data.
WHOIS service will be made
available on the .KIDS Domains, Inc. registration site and, in the interest of
promoting a broad distribution of transparency regarding registration of .kids
sites, access to the WHOIS service by other domain name service providers will
be made available.
We
will maintain an up-to-date "Whois" database having total public
availability for all .KIDS domain
registrations. The database will have a format that is readily
accessible by and can be integrated into existing "Whois" databases
for other TLDs.
.KIDS Domains, Inc. will engage
an established data escrow provider to act as a third party holder of updated
WHOIS data for the .kids registry. .KIDS Domains, Inc. also intends to make
the WHOIS data available to ICANN and name ICANN a custodian with the data
escrow provider, to protect .kids users in the event of an ICANN policy change
or the dissolution of .KIDS Domains, Inc.
The primary method of payment for
the registration of a .kids domain name will be online via credit card utilizing
a secure gateway in an encrypted, protected manner. .KIDS Domains, Inc will also open itself to alternate methods
of real-time registration transactions such as x.com, paypal, and children's
online payment systems such as Flooz.
.KIDS Domains, Inc. believes that
it is important that the availability of registration rights for .kids domains
also be made available to those who choose not to use, are unable to use, or
in the case of many children, do not have access to credit cards and other
instruments required for online payment.
To that end, .KIDS Domains, Inc. will accept more traditional forms of
payment, such as checks, money orders, and cashier's checks, for the
registration of .kids domain names.
In the event that a registrant
chooses a non-real time method of payment (such as check or money order), the
domain that they seek to register will be held in escrow for 10 days.
During that time the registrant will be required to deliver payment to
.KIDS Domains, Inc. Three days prior to the end of the escrow period, if .KIDS
Domains, Inc. has not received payment, a reminder will be sent to the
registrant applicant offering a 5 day extension of the escrow period.
.KIDS
Domains, Inc. will establish a separate mailing address and transaction
department for the processing of payment made by registrants via courier.
In this way .KIDS Domains, Inc. will ensure that registration requests
made with non-real time payment methods receive an expedited treatment, and
that registrants who pay for their .kids domain in that way are given access
to a similar level of service.
While we do not anticipate high
demand for the option, .KIDS Domains, Inc. will also allow prospective
registrants who so desire to find and register a domain name completely
off-line. These registrants will
reserve a name over the phone and be mailed copies of the Terms of Use and
“Guidelines” which they will be required to execute and return with
payment. They may also phone in
their credit card after .KIDS Domains, Inc. has received their agreements.
.KIDS Domains, Inc. will also
establish a separate customer service team to handle registrations and
transactional needs for children who register .kids domain names (see Services
and Pricing, E9).
We will provide
renewal billing by way of online payment, as well as renewal payment by way of
postal billing. We will provide
extended billing for more than one year at a time but will not give price
breaks for early payment. Extended
billing will not be transferable and will be non-refundable.
.KIDS Domains, Inc. is
proposing a pricing model that is based upon the intended owner of the domain
and the risk of site content. Pricing
will be broken down into four tiers using the following structure:
·
Personal
Domain Names – A fee of $19.00 (U.S.
Dollars) annually, will be charged to applicants requesting a domain name for
personal use. These websites are
considered “low risk” due to their limited scope of content, and
therefore, are easier to monitor. Registrants of Personal Domain
Names will be required to expressly acknowledge their agreement with
the .KIDS Domains, Inc. Terms of Service and the "Guidelines" at the
time of registration and renewal of registration. Personal Domain
Name owners will be required to complete and hold current an annual
self-administered content audit.
Child Registrants - .KIDS Domains, Inc. anticipates offering a discount
to children who register .kids domain names.
We anticipate the formation of a special customer service team to
address the special needs of child registrants, such as payment method,
express parental consent and modified Terms of Use and “Guidelines” that
are accessible and educating for children.
·
Business
Domain Names – A fee of $39.00 (U.S.
Dollars) annually, will be charged to businesses and organizations that intend
to use their sites for commercial or non-commercial purposes.
Business Domain owners must have direct control over 80% of the
content of their websites, with no more than 20% content not directly under
control of the owner. These sites are considered “mid risk” because of the
percentage of content not under the direct control and supervision of the
content owner, and because many of these sites will seek to engage in commerce
of some form with children using the .kids sites. Registrants of Business
Domain Names will be required to expressly acknowledge their
agreement with the .KIDS Domains, Inc. Terms of Service and the
"Guidelines" at the time of registration and renewal of
registration. Business Domain Name owners will also be
allowed to complete and hold current, an annual self-administered content
audit.
· Portal
Site Domain Names - An annual
registration fee of $99.00 (U.S. Dollars) will be charged to businesses and
organizations using their sites for commercial or non-commercial purposes, to
provide links to a variety of sites, not directly under the control of the
site operator, which have or anticipate developing, at the time of
registration or renewal, no more than 200,000 page views per month. These
sites are considered “serious risk” due to the amount of content present
on the sites that is not under the direct control of the registrant.
Registrants of Portal Site Domain Names will be required to
expressly acknowledge their agreement with the .KIDS Domains, Inc. Terms of
Service and the "Guidelines" at the time of registration and the
renewal of registration. Portal Site owners will also be required to
submit to and hold current, an annual audit administered by a .KIDS accredited
auditing firm (see "Auditing" E10).
· Special
Site Domain Names - An annual
registration fee of between $150.00 and $2,500.00 (U.S. Dollars) will be
charged to businesses and organizations using their sites for commercial or
non-commercial purposes, to provide links to a variety of sites, not directly
under the control of the site operator, which have or anticipate developing,
at the time of registration or renewal, more than 200,000 page views per
month.
The
sliding scale of registration fees will be based upon page views per
month and will be determined during the negotiation period with ICANN.
It is anticipated that sites which have or anticipate developing within
the registration period more than 4 million page views per month will fall
into the highest paying category. These sites are considered
“high risk” due to the amount of content present on the sites that is not
under the direct control of the registrant. Registrants of Special Site
Domain Names will be required to expressly acknowledge their
agreement with the .KIDS Domains, Inc. Terms of Service and the
"Guidelines for the Publishing of Content and Use of .kids Domain
Space" at the time of registration and the renewal of registration.
Special Site owners will also be required to submit to and hold current,
an annual audit administered by a .KIDS Domains, Inc. accredited auditing firm
(see E10 "Auditing")
As part of their registration fee, Special
Site Domain registrants will also gain membership in the constituency that
elects the High Risk Group Self-Regulatory Commission (Self-Regulatory
Commission). The Self-Regulatory Commission will exist as an organization
comprised of .KIDS Domains, Inc. high risk domain name registrants, under the
oversight of the Content Policy Board, and will be responsible for determining
specific guidelines and policy regarding questions of content appropriateness
on .kids sites.
The Self-Regulatory Commission
will be charged by the Content Policy Board to work closely with established
child safety and online policy organizations.
.KIDS Domains, Inc.
Audit and Auditor Accreditation Process
.KIDS Domains, Inc. intends to
require that each domain registrant in the .kids network submit to an annual
content and suitability audit. The audit process will be managed and overseen
by the Content Policy Board. The .KIDS Domains, Inc. Content Policy Board will
be responsible for:
1. The
formulation of the .KIDS Domains, Inc. "Guidelines
for the Publishing of Content and Use of .KIDS Domain Space"
(“Guidelines”).
2. Determining
the criteria for the accreditation of independent auditing firms.
3.
Managing the process of accrediting independent firms as authorized to
perform .KIDS Content Audits.
4.
Overseeing
the High Risk Group Self-Regulatory Commission.
Personal and Business sites, as
defined above under "Services and Pricing", will be required to
perform a self-administered audit, acknowledging their compliance with the
individual points outlined in, "Guidelines
for the Publishing of Content and Use of .KIDS Domain Space".
Registrants of personal and business sites will be required
to have a completed Self-Audit acknowledgment on file with .KIDS Domains, Inc.
that is dated during the current contract year.
Portal and Special sites, as
defined under "Services and Pricing", will be required to arrange
for, and submit to, an annual audit administered by a firm accredited by .KIDS
Domains, Inc. Set by the original
domain name registration date, a current annually-completed audit must be on
file with .KIDS Domains, Inc., in order to maintain ownership of a .kids
domain name. Audit requirements will differ for Portal and Special sites, with
the requirements for these audits being more in depth.
.KIDS Domains, Inc. intends
that the Content Policy Board will fund the content audit accreditation
process through fees collected from firms applying to be registered as
Official Accredited .KIDS Domains, Inc. Auditors.
Accredited auditors will be required to be bonded and insured, be
subject to random compliance inspections from the Content Policy Board, and
will be required to renew their status as accredited auditors every two (2)
years.
.KIDS Domains, Inc. anticipates
that the registration enough accredited .KIDS Domains, Inc. auditors to create
a competitive environment will ensure .kids domain name registrants can
contract auditing firms a fair market price.
Education
One of
the powerful benefits that .KIDS Domains, Inc anticipates contributing to the
Internet community is in the education of registrants, website owners, visitors
of .kids sites, and the Internet community as a whole. .KIDS Domains,
Inc. intends to illuminate the existing laws, rules, regulations, and
policies regarding the publication of content for the viewing of children on
the Internet, and the engagement of children in commerce and contracts.
.KIDS
Domains, Inc. believes that the .kids TLD as proposed within this application
presents a unique opportunity to educate both personal website owners as well
as large corporations and mark holders, as to the regulations and guidelines
regarding the use of their domain name and website as it relates to children.
There exists
significant policy, legislation, and regulations regarding interaction
with children and the publication of content that is available for
viewing by children on the Internet. We believe that the vastness,
global multi-jurisdictional nature, and explosive growth of the World
Wide Web has made those policies and regulations, to date, difficult if
not impossible to enforce on the current Internet landscape.
We believe
that one of the reasons for the lack of enforcement of current law, policy,
and regulations, is the lack of an impetus to encourage Internet users
and more importantly domain name owners and website operators to abide by
those guidelines. However,
.KIDS Domains, Inc. believes that the primary reason for the lack of abided
behavior on the Internet regarding children is simply a lack of
awareness regarding exactly what those existing laws, policies, and
regulations are.
.KIDS
Domains, Inc. further believes that there are currently no attempts by
registrars to promote that education at the point of registration. By
removing the time-sensitivity of the registration process via the use of
a Sunrise Period and Wristband system (see E11, Phase 3), .KIDS Domains, Inc.
will both promote and ensure that registrants become aware not only of the
policies for publication of content on .kids sites but also on websites
located on the Internet at large.
All prospective registrants
of .kids domain names will be required, prior to registration of a domain name
or entry into any of the initial programs below, to become registered users.
To become a registered user, prospective registrants will be required
to expressly acknowledge the .KIDS Domains, Inc Terms of Use and the
“Guidelines”
We believe that by making
registrants first become registered users, .KIDS Domains will promote the
stability of the .kids platform as a haven for safe content, and also the
enhance the education of the Internet community as a whole.
.KIDS
Domains, Inc. Four Phase TLD Registration Process
a)
The sunrise period will entail a
sufficient notification period followed by a 30 day application period where
trademark owners will be given an opportunity to register .kids domain names
upon payment of the initial fee and the first year’s annual fee.
i)
.kids domain names corresponding to trademark owners marks can be
registered before such a domain
is opened to the general public.
ii)
It is the primary intent of .KIDS Domains, Inc. to maintain policies to
protect the intellectual property of others.
iii)
A $20.00 (U.S. Dollars) fee will be charged to famous name and
trademark holders to cover the costs of mark name ownership research and
verification.
iv)
If more than one claim is made for the same domain-name the rules of
arbitration and mediation set by WIPO will be followed.
v)
.KIDS Domains, Inc. may offer the opportunity to all claimants of the
same second-level domain-names to a distribution page which would show the
user a list of sites operating under the same name.
vi)
If all parties agree a lottery may be held to determine the
owner of the second-level domain-name.
a) In
this phase .KIDS will develop a “glamour” list of the top 1000 to 2000
words/names and will seek to sell these domain names using an established,
well-respected, online auction service. The proceeds of this auction will be distributed to a newly
formed public charity, chartered to distribute the funds as follows:
i) 50%
to the support of the infrastructure pursuing worthwhile endeavors toward the
safety of children using the Internet.
iv)
50% allocated by the Board of Directors of the Public Foundation to
charities whose mission is to feed, clothe, or enrich the lives of children
around the world.
v)
Subsequent annual registration fees for these names will be 25% of the
auctioned price. This fee will
forever be established as a reoccurring donation to the charity fund.
Upon transfer of ownership the
registration policy, the annual registration fee to charitable contribution,
will remain in place.
Note: All
domains are transferable, but restrictions and regulations transfer with the
name.
a)
A month-long period will be initiated where registrants can claim names
not trademarked or part of the charitable lottery program.
All applicants must be registered users and agree to .KIDS Domains,
Inc. Terms and Conditions, as well as, pay the registration fee.
i)
Users will be able to go to the .kids site and enter a list of 10 names
that they would like to register. Applicants
will be encouraged to prioritize their choices from high to low.
ii)
Applicants will be assigned a random priority position, generated by a
computer, in the selection process and will be overseen by a large, reputable
accounting firm.
iii)
A computer will generate random priority assignments, essentially
placing the applicants in line for their domains.
iv)
Our computer system will then go through the line processing the
requests of the applicants according to their randomly assigned number.
The domain name highest on an applicant’s list and still available
for registration will be assigned to the applicant. Applicants will be able to
register only one (1) domain-name on their list.
v)
Applicants must have their website under construction or online within
120 days from the date of registration.
Registration
will be opened to all requests. All
terms and conditions must be followed upon the grant of a domain-name,
including Terms of Use and “Guidelines”.
During open registration, prospective registrants will also be required
to register as users, and in doing so expressly acknowledge the Terms of Use
and “Guidelines”.
.KIDS
Domains, Inc. anticipates significant general demand for .kids domain names.
.KIDS Domains, Inc. believes that by instituting a 4-phase registration
plan which will, in essence, disburse and extend the initial registration
process, we will effectively and positively manage the initial rush for
registration.
.KIDS
Domains, Inc., and our registry operation partner, Tucows, Inc., have the
ability to handle 10,000 queries per minute and believe that this will more
than adequately cover the volume expected during the initial registration
period.
We believe that the
implementation of a “Sunrise” period for famous and trademark names, as
well as our proposed "Wristband" period for initial registration of
.kids domain names by the public, will ensure a more managed and controlled
flow of requests and corresponding assignment of domain names, as well as
simultaneously improving the inherent fairness of the initial registration
process.
It is anticipated that Phase
Three, and the initial weeks of the Phase Four general registration process,
will bear the greatest traffic load, with requests for information and the
number of registrations.
Because the 4-phase
registration plan will control the demand for .kids domain name .KIDS Domains,
Inc. believes that the proposed TLD presents a unique opportunity to educate
both personal website owners, as well as large corporations and mark holders,
as to the regulations and guidelines regarding the use of the domain name and
website as it relates to children.
There
will be no limit to the number of requests an applicant can make, however they
must abide by the “Guidelines” and have a working website for each granted
domain name, within 120 days.
There is no special rush pricing for registration under the “Wristband” period, or during the subsequent general registrations.
An extra $20.00 (U.S.
Dollars) fee will apply to famous name and trademark holders to cover the
costs of mark name ownership research and verification.
.KIDS
Domains, Inc. will implement a "Sunrise” period policy wherein the
owners of famous marks as
identified in the famous marks list maintained
by WIPO and any exactly matching active U.S. Federal Trademark
Registration may claim their .kids domain names.
An extra $20.00 (U.S.
Dollars) fee will apply to famous name and trademark holders to cover the
costs of mark name ownership research and verification.
We have read and fully intend
to comply with the IPCs findings of August 24, 2000.
General
registration for .kids domain names, outside of the initial procedures
described in the section "Four Phase TLD Registration Process", are
limited to, and depend wholly on the express acknowledgement and agreement by
the registrant to 1) the .KIDS Domains, Inc. Terms of Use, 2) the "
Guidelines" as described and published by the Content Policy Board, and
3) completion and/or current status of a an audit performed by an accredited
.KIDS Domains Auditing Firm.
New
registrants and registrants seeking to renew their registration will be
required, as part of the registration process, to read and acknowledge each
point in the .KIDS Domains, Inc. Terms of Use and "Guidelines" by
entering their initials into a form field beside each paragraph.
.KIDS
Domains, Inc. also believes it will be an effective force in educating the
Internet community regarding the laws and rules concerning children and
content for children on the Internet. The majority of the material in the
.KIDS Domain, Inc. Terms of Use and the “Guidelines" will be based in
current US Policy, such as The Federal Trade Commission's final rule pursuant
to the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998 (``COPPA''), effective
April 21, 2000, and on recognized policy developed by worldwide consensus
forming bodies.
As
such, .KIDS Domains, Inc. believes that in effectively communicating the
requirements for operating a website at a .kids domain address, and in
requiring registrants to expressly read and acknowledge those requirements the
company will further the awareness of the laws and policy regarding children
and content on the Internet as a whole.
By
removing the time-sensitivity of the registration process via the use of a
“Sunrise” period and “Wristband” system.
.KIDS Domains, Inc. will both promote and ensure that registrants
become aware not only of the policies for publication of content on .kids
sites but also on websites located on the Internet at large.
.kids
domain applicants will be required to acknowledge and accept the Terms of Use
and the “Guidelines” produced by the .KIDS Domains, Inc. Content Policy
Board.
.kids domain
applicants will be asked to categorize the nature of their site content and
intended use as either Personal, Business and Organization, Portal, or
Special.
.kids domain
applicants will be required to have an operating site present and available at
their .kids domain address within 3 months of registration. .kids domain
applicants will also agree to complete the audit on their newly registered
site within 4 months of registration.
The majority
of applications for .kids domain names will be done online. During the general
registration period, prospective applicants will:
1.
Become registered .KIDS Domains, Inc. users and agree to the Terms of
Use and “Guidelines”
2.
Enter their desired domain name into
an initial form and search for its availability.
3.
Subsequent to a query confirming that the domain name is available, be
asked to categorize their proposed website as a.) Personal, b.) Business or
Organization, c.) Portal or d.) Special.
Highly specific, easily understandable definitions and rules to aid in
categorization will be made obvious.
4.
Be asked to provide registrant information, administrative, billing,
technical contact information, hosting and DNS information.
There will be a non-technical , one-step solution for novice
registrants to “park” their new domain.
5.
Asked to read and accept each individual tenet of the .KIDS Terms of
Use and the “Guidelines”. At
this point registrants will be agreeing to the immediate forfeiture of their
.kids domain name in the event of a breach of the terms and conditions.
6.
Read the educational document covering the policies for publication of
content on .kids sites and policy, laws, and regulations regarding
the providing of content for viewing of children in general.
One
of the powerful benefits that .KIDS Domains, Inc. anticipates contributing to
the Internet community is the education of registrants, website owners,
visitors of .kids sites, and the community as a whole, at the point of
application. The aim is to
illuminate existing laws, rules, regulations, and policies regarding the
publication of content for the viewing of children on the Internet and the
engagement of children in commerce and contract.
We believe
that one of the reasons for the lack of enforcement of current law, policy,
and regulations, is the lack of an impetus to encourage Internet users
and, more importantly domain name owners and website operators to abide
by those guidelines. However, .KIDS Domains, Inc. believes that
the primary reason for the lack of abided behavior on the Internet regarding
children is simply a lack
of awareness regarding
exactly what those existing laws, policies, and regulations are.
.KIDS Domains, Inc. will
require that each domain registrant in the .kids network submit to an annual
content and suitability audit. The
audit process will be managed and overseen by the Content Policy Board.
The .KIDS Domains, Inc. Content Policy Board will be responsible for:
1.
The formulation of the .KIDS Domains, Inc. "Guidelines
for the Publishing of Content and Use of .kids Domain Space".
2.
Determining the criteria for the accreditation of independent auditing
firms.
3.
Managing the process of accrediting independent firms as authorized to
perform .kids content audits.
4.
Personal and Business Sites, as defined above under "Services and
Pricing", will be required to perform a self-administered audit,
acknowledging their compliance with the individual points outlined in the
"Guidelines".
Registrants of Personal and Business sites will be required
to have a completed Self-Audit acknowledgment on file with .KIDS Domains, Inc,
dated during the current contract year.
5.
Portal and Business sites, as defined under "Services and
Pricing", will be required to arrange for, and submit to, an annual audit
administered by firm accredited by .KIDS Domains, Inc..
A current (1 year) completed audit must be on file with .KIDS Domains,
Inc., in order to maintain ownership of a .kids domain name.
6.
Audit requirements will differ for Portal and Special sites, with the
requirements for Special audits being more in depth.
7.
.KIDS Domains, Inc. anticipates that many sites will have occasion to
register a .kids domain name and have the address redirect the user to their
established site (a .com or .net address for example). We will have no
policy against redirects, however the .kids registrant will be accountable for
the content on the redirect site and the .kids domain will be subject to the
same restrictions.
8.
.KIDS Domains, Inc. will establish a separate Policy Dispute department
under the Content Policy Board that will process, mediate, and make decisions
on disputes that arise out of action taken by .KIDS Domains, Inc. in response
to violations of the .KIDS Domains, Inc. Terms of Use or
"Guidelines".
.KIDS
Domains, Inc. expects that the Content Policy Board will fund the content
audit accreditation process through fees collected from firms applying to be
registered as official, accredited .KIDS Domains, Inc. auditors.
Accredited auditors will be required to be bonded and insured, and will
be subject to random compliance inspections from the Content Policy Board, and
will be required to renew their status as accredited auditors every two (2)
years.
.KIDS Domains, Inc. anticipates
the registering of enough accredited .KIDS Domains, Inc. auditors to create a
competitive environment that will ensure .kids
domain name registrants can contract auditing firms at the fairest
market price.
As described
in other areas of this proposal, .KIDS Domains, Inc. believes that one of the
powerful benefits we anticipate contributing to the Internet community is in
the education of registrants, website owners, visitors of .kids sites,
and the Internet community as a whole. .KIDS Domains, Inc. intends
to illuminate the existing laws, rules, regulations, and policies regarding
the publication of content for the viewing of children on the Internet, and
the engagement of children in commerce and contracts; thereby minimizing the
violations of the guidelines set for .kids sites.
The High Risk
Group Self Regulatory Commission operating under the supervision of the
Content Policy Board and with a membership made up of “high risk” domain
name registrants as defined in Pricing (E9) will be responsible for the
formulation of policy regarding less objective areas of suitability.
The Content
Policy Board itself will be directly charged with discovering, gathering,
and aggregating those policies, regulations, and laws that are age based and
are currently in effect. .KIDS
Domains, Inc. believes this is a crucial delineation in our proposal to
oversee the .kids TLD. The
fundamental pillars of .KIDS Domains, Inc.
policy on suitability and appropriateness will be built upon laws,
accepted policy, and regulations that already exist but which are virtually
impossible to enforce on the Internet as it exists currently.
As an
example, The 21st Amendment of the United
States grants individual authority to regulate the distribution and use of
alcoholic beverages. Each state has enacted statutes that govern the
distribution, taxation, sale, and consumption of alcoholic beverages within
that state, as well as provisions regarding criminal and civil liability for
harms resulting from the consumption of alcohol.
In every state it is illegal to
sell alcohol to minors. More
importantly there exist countless non-profit groups, advertising industry
coalitions, and alcohol industry coalitions which have established policy
codes aimed at eliminating the advertising and promotion of alcohol to
children.
On the Internet these policies have
proved difficult to enforce. And,
according the Center For Media Education’s Report, “Youth Access to
Alcohol and Tobacco Web Marketing” October 1999, “…it is clear that
these companies are creating environments and activities that could appeal to
children and teens.”
.KIDS Domains, Inc. would mandate a
clear cut policy prohibiting the advertising of alcoholic products, promotion
by and for the alcohol industry, links to non-educational alcohol related
sites, and obviously any alcohol related commerce.
The table
below (Figure 1.1) illuminates guidelines as they currently exist regarding
products and issues, and the straightforward ease with which those guidelines
will translate to .kids policy.
THE
DOT COM CONUNDRUM
Challenging
Issues Regarding Children and the Internet
Issue Product |
.COM |
.KIDS |
Alcohol |
¨
It is illegal to sell alcohol to minors in all 50 US States. ¨
It is, however, legal to sell
alcohol and advertise it to adults.
But there is no way to tell how old the person visiting a website
is. ¨
The alcohol and advertising industries have expressed their
desire to avoid advertising their product to children.
¨
The World Health Organization’s European Charter on Alcohol has
also addressed the issue responsibility in advertising regarding
children. |
Because children are the only
constituency, the advertising of alcoholic products, promotion by and
for the alcohol industry, links to alcohol industry sites or promotional
material will be strictly prohibited on .kids websites. |
Tobacco |
¨
The sale of tobacco products to
children is strictly prohibited. But
it is legal for adults to purchase cigarettes and so it is a very
difficult issue on an anonymous Internet. ¨
Sale to minors via the Internet
is also illegal. Recently,
Congressman Meehan of Massachusetts became aware of the lack of age
restrictions at various sites, which offered cigarettes for sale. ¨
Meehan has introduced HR 2914 to
prohibit the sale of tobacco to minors on the Internet. |
Because children are the only
constituency, the advertising of tobacco products, promotion by and for
the tobacco industry, links to tobacco industry sites or promotional
material, and obviously the sale of tobacco products will be strictly
prohibited on .kids websites. |
Pornography |
¨
By law, the availability of
pornography offline is limited to adults. ¨
The Internet has made that same
adult oriented material much more easily available to minors online.
Not only is it available but also it is at times unavoidable. ¨
A study by the Safe American
Foundation reported that 91% of teenagers said they unintentionally
accessed web sites featuring pornographic, hate-based or violent
material while conducting research for school or just surfing the Web.** |
The laws regarding the
distribution of pornography to minors in the will apply to all sites in
the .kids network. Because children are the only
constituency, all pornography will be strictly prohibited on .kids
websites. |
Hate
and Bigotry |
The
first amendment does not protect threats, and that includes racial
epithets and racial animus. According
to Christopher Wolf of the Anti-Defamation League, “Where the
activities of hate groups once were limited by geographical boundaries,
the Internet allows even the smallest fringe group to spread hate and
freely recruit members online by tapping into the worldwide audience
that the Web provides. Technology also offers such groups the ability to
post messages in chat rooms and communicate like never before.”
Unfortunately,
the anonymity of the Internet makes the current medium nearly impossible
to police criminal hate. |
All
current law and the strictest of existing policy regarding hate related
communication will be enforced on .kids sites. Further, .kids will work with groups like the
Anti-defamation league to develop a clear cut component of overall
policy prohibiting the publication of hate related communication and
material. |
The Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998 states
that it, “…is unlawful for an operator of a website or online
service directed to children, or any operator that has actual knowledge
that it is collecting personal information from a child, to collect
personal information from a child…” without, “…verifiable
parental consent for the collection, use, or disclosure of personal
information from children.” Among other things. |
Because children are the only
constituency assumed on .KIDS sites, any and ALL requests for personal
information will be required to comply with the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act of 1998 |
(Figure 1.1) ** "In Brief:
Look What We Have Here." (October 11, 1999). Time
The
registrant may pay an appeal fee and appear before a standards board. A
separate Policy Dispute Department under the Content Policy Board will
process, mediate, and make decisions on disputes that arise out of action
taken by .KIDS Domains, Inc. in response to violations of the .KIDS Domains,
Inc. Terms of Use or "Guidelines".
Failure
to comply with the Terms of Use for .kids domain names, and/or violation of
“Guidelines” , and/or failure to complete an annual audit may result in
the revocation of rights to the domain name in question.
Registrants
guilty of a first time, aberrant violation, (to be defined in the
“Guidelines For The Publishing Of Content And Use Of .kids Domain Space”)
will receive a warning via email and US Post.
.kids registrants will be allowed one warning per year. A second "typical violation" within a year will
result in a letter informing the registrant of the intended revocation of
their .kids domain name license in 10 days, and the actual revocation of the
license and the removal of the domain name address from the .kids registry.
.KIDS
Domains, Inc. reserves the right, in the case of a gross aberrant violation,
(to be defined in the “Guidelines”), to remove the domain address from the
registry immediately and without notice. .KIDS Domains, Inc. rights and
proposed actions in the case of a Failure to Comply will be outlined in the
Terms of Use and agreed to by .kids domain name registrants.
Obvious benefits of a .kids top
level domain include the already mentioned expansion of available domain
names, increase in specific segmented space, and a target audience that will
provide a large test bed, with limitations and restrictions placed on content
and use.
Utilizing the top level domain
space to segment space specifically to be used by a particular group or
segmentation is the evolution of the DNS.
Utilizing the inherent specifications for children can prove as an
excellent test bed for continued technological improvement.
The global Internet community will no doubt benefit from the concept of
responsibility of content, enforcement of restrictions, and value placed on
positive change rather than penalization.
.kids
would benefit the global internet community by preventing access to content
that should not be on websites designed for users, ages 8 to 18.
Currently .com, .net, .org, and even .edu, are used by a variety of
interests to promote a multitude of services.
Adults on the Internet are able to comprehend more information, enter
into legal contracts, and from experience in their own lives, make judgments
regarding commercial transactions, opportunities and content made available to
them on the Internet.
We do not
believe children, especially at a young age, possess these abilities, nor
should they interact with the Internet content creators on a level playing
field. We believe ICANN should
allocate the .kids top level domain name to provide protection and encourage
to children to use the internet in a way most beneficial to them.
In
some ways the current Internet may look to children the same way that the
voices of parents were portrayed in the Peanut’s Cartoon Strip—Blah Blah
Blah Blah Blah. The way sites are
organized, in an effective manner to communicate with adults, may not be the
best way to engage children.
In addition, children cannot
enter into a binding contract. If
a child is required to register for a page, or purchases an item, that is not
a legally enforceable contract. The
concept of “buyer beware” is now used for people to be on their toes, to
be on their look out against fraudulent schemes.
Children do not possess enough experience to use the Internet in the
same manner as adults, when it comes to giving out personal information.
Instead of telling children that they can’t use the same internet, or
that they can’t go to certain sites, we want the children to have access to
.kids sites to find out about history, geography, specific companies, music,
entertainment, people, diversity and all the other things that one might
search for by typing in a domain name on the internet.
We believe we will be providing
a user experience for kids directly. In
the same way that adults are able to choose what domain name they use to
access a site, we expect children to do the same thing and we believe that
this is a presently unmet need in the DNS.
We strongly hold that the new TLD .kids, as well as other new TLDs,
segmenting the internet by user group, will enhance the utility of the DNS and
the communities served by our top level domain name.
Using the DNS to create a
child safe area will enable the Internet community to focus “kid safe”
authoring tools and software, to become more effective.
We believe that the segmentation we will achieve with the .kids TLD
will enable a more definitive line to be drawn for filtering technologies.
The .kids extension should vastly improve the effectiveness of
filtering technologies and increase parents’ confidence in them.
Developing the .kids platform
of websites that meet a standardized and uniform set of guidelines, the
potential effectiveness of existing filtering and child-safety software tools
will be dramatically enhanced. .KIDS
Domains, Inc. will actively engage these filtering and child protection
software companies to promote a more effective development of their products.
While .KIDS Domains, Inc. seeks
first to promote a network of sites that are engaging and relevant enough that
most children will opt for the ‘.kids version’ of a corporate site, we do
anticipate that filtering software companies will develop features within
their products that will allow parents to restrict their children to only
.kids websites.
A sponsored restricted TLD,
such as .kids, resolves many issues facing parental governing of childrens’
experiences on the Internet.
Utilizing a soon-to-be-formed
technology that would also grade advertising could bring benefits to keeping
non-pornographic advertising out of the business sector.
As a proof of concept .kids will bring many benefits to the long list
of building top level domains that wish to become available.
.KIDS
Domains, Inc. will distinguish itself by providing an environment that will
truly be considered “kid safe” on the internet, housing websites and
pages that create an entire DNS area on the web that is designed and safe for
children. By developing a well thought out system for the
discovery, communication, and enforcement of standards pertaining to websites
with .kids domain addresses, .KIDS Domains, Inc. will establish the
.kids TLD as a virtual place set apart from the broad spectrum of
content that is currently on the Internet.
.KIDS
Domains, Inc. also believes the education of domain name
registrants, at the point of registration and registration renewal, as to existing
laws, policies, regulations,
and consensus will distinguish .KIDS Domains, Inc as an authoritative and
credible voice regarding children and their overall Internet experience.
The target market for .kids
sites will include:
1.
Children worldwide, who use the Internet occasionally and everyday, and
who have been born into the potential occasion to become the most educated,
enlightened, and successful generation in history as a result of the
information opportunity created by the Internet.
2.
The parents, grandparents and guardians of those children, who
understand the promise and potential power of the Internet in the lives of
their children, but who fear the effect on their children of unfiltered
exposure to the tremendous amount of inappropriate content that is currently
present and readily available online.
3.
Family focused businesses and websites that count children as an
important part of their community and customer base. Most businesses, because
of their ownership of only one branded, recognizable domain must tailor their
Internet sites to their adult users. .KIDS
Domains, Inc. intends to allow businesses and site operators to create
parallel sites, specifically tailored (navigation, content, limitations on
personal information requests, etc.) for child users, that allow the company
to fully leverage its brand awareness (ie. afunsite.com and afunsite.kids).
.KIDS Domains, Inc. is
sensitive to the developing needs of the DNS.
The introduction of new TLD will expand the load on the DNS.
.KIDS Domains, Inc. hopes that as a restricted TLD and one that
requires .kids domain name registrants to construct an operational website
within 120 days of registration, that we will pre-qualify the seriousness of
registrants who do utilize the DNS.
The
.kids TLD opens up new domain-names that have been carefully monitored to be
appropriate for children. Parents can be sure that all domain-name owners follow the
strict guidelines set for bearing the .kids “seal of approval”.
Having seen the direct benefit
to internet users and registered owners of domain names of competition in the
space, we applaud ICANN’s move to allow multiple registrars of domain names,
To protect children and to
provide a more consistent registration policy we will not initially use
competing registrars to register names. We
do believe that adding new TLDs will enhance the competition for registration
of all domain names.
Working in conjunction with
ICANN, .KIDS Domains, Inc. can begin to evaluate whether the concept of
further segmentation of the DNS and internet community will prove beneficial
to Internet Service Providers, domain name owners and, the users themselves.
By creating specialty TLDs a new world is opened up to the
possibilities of content providers to reach their target audiences and to the
user population to find a place on the Internet that feels like home.
We believe that the user should
be able, via their keyboard, to control the experience they have on the
Internet. Providers of Internet content and commerce should be able to
specifically tailor to a demographic, without having to worry whether the
content meets all possible needs through one site.
While the content of .net, and
.org were originally intended to have a certain focus, they along with .com
have become a virtual form of stream-of-consciousness, where anything goes and
anything can be said. It is a
loud and broad stage. The content and the audience on the Internet need to be
segmented. So where better to
begin than with children and how better to begin than by granting them their
own piece of the Internet.
Adults have the life experience
to make decisions that place them in situations where they are comfortable and
to stay clear of those that are not. Children,
on the other hand, need guidance, but also deserve the variety that will
create an engaging and exciting experience, in a positive environment.
The idea is that children can become explorers in a territory that
stimulates their minds, and not get weighed down by the obstacles of
information that is neither of interest or appropriate.
Also, allowing parents to use
the .kids domain sites to enforce a level of protection, until their children
are able to make decisions on their own, and make visible to Internet
creators-of-content the possibilities that exist when they focus on what kids
would like to see, as opposed to the restrictive policies of what kids can’t
see.
As
discussed in our "Sponsoring Organization's Proposal", .KIDS
Domains, Inc. believes that the organizational structure of the DNS presents a
unique opportunity to set aside a specific place for children within the
information landscape.
The
current Internet constituency and the breadth of information published to
appeal to that constituency is best described as "full spectrum".
While information segmentation exists at the individual domain name
level, (i.e. monstertruck.com vs. quiltersguild.com), the conduit of that
information organized by the current DNS offers little of the segmentation
that the system is uniquely qualified to deliver.
.KIDS Domains, Inc. believes that the establishment of a restricted
.kids TLD will demonstrate the value and effectiveness of segmenting Internet
constituencies.
By
using the DNS to segment the constituency addressed at specific websites,
.KIDS Domains, Inc. intends to enable companies, organizations, webmasters,
and content providers to speak in a voice specifically tailored to their
audience, children. By developing and facilitating a network of .KIDS
websites, .KIDS Domains, Inc. intends to make it easier for all companies and
website owners to publish information on the Internet in a more responsible
way.
.KIDS
Domains, Inc. believes its specific proposal for the introduction of the .kids
TLD will serve the entire Internet community by introducing a more focused
system for both the discovery and the delivery of relevant content to children
on the Internet.
It
is the belief of .KIDS Domains, Inc. that the opening, as proposed here, of
the .kids TLD will serve as an excellent test to determine whether real value
can be added to the Internet as a whole by using the DNS to segment a
constituency and the delivery of content to that constituency.
We
believe the success of our top level domain name will be measured by our
users, and their evaluation of whether they have been able to more succinctly
deliver content to children, improving children’s education, awareness,
diversity experience and commerce opportunities on the internet, than times
when only open level domain names existed
To evaluate whether .kids has
successfully deterred children from sites that they should not be viewing and
successfully included a better Internet experience, we propose the following:
·
Four months or so prior to the opening
of the TLD we would like to monitor the usage patterns of 10,000 children from
the general Internet viewing audience.
·
At the same time we would like to
evaluate metrics from top websites as to the average time spent, and the
average satisfaction, of users on those sites.
·
12 months, after the introduction of
the .kids infrastructure, we would interview the same group and ask them the
same questions about their user experience.
We believe a comparison of the data from these groups, and allegorical
data from new groups, will tells us whether kids enjoy being able to control
themselves when they type in the domain name address whether they want to go
to a .com or a .kids site.
·
Monitor on a semi-annual basis whether
perceptions of about the ability to control kids usage and the availability of
indecent sites, on the Internet, have changed and whether those changes are
due to the .kids domain name.
Positive results from the .kids
TLD initiative could have significant long term effects on the DNS and the way
it is utilized to organize the Internet.
Should the creation of a platform that allows for the segmentation of a
constituency, like children, prove to be an effective and beneficial method
for both communicator and audience to interact, the DNS will soon be used to
better serve other constituencies.
Seniors, a demographic that is
growing at an astounding rate but who utilize the Internet less frequently
than any other age group may be well served by a .snr extension.
.snr sites may require much larger fonts, among other things.
Another example is the potential further segmentation of the youth
audience by assigning the teen age constituency their own, perhaps .cool.
We
have tried to illuminate the benefits of our proposal for sponsorship of a
.kids TLD. Once our application
is made public, we anticipate that many more exciting ideas for the use and
utility of .kids will surface. If
possible, we also look forward to communicating these ideas to ICANN in the
coming months.
By signing this application
through its representative, the Applicant attests that the information
contained in this Description of TLD Policies, and all referenced supporting
documents, are true and accurate to the best of Applicant's knowledge.
_______________________________
Signature
_______________________________
Name (please print)
_______________________________
Title
_______________________________
Name of Applicant Entity
_______________________________
Date
.KIDS Domains, Inc. Four Phase TLD Registration Process
b)
The sunrise period
will entail a sufficient notification period followed by a 30 day application
period where trademark owners will be given an opportunity to register .kids
domain names upon payment of the initial fee and the first year’s annual
fee.
vi)
.kids domain names corresponding to trademark owners marks can be
registered before such a domain
is opened to the general public.
vii)
It is the primary intent of .KIDS Domains, Inc. to maintain policies to
protect the intellectual property of others.
viii)
A $20.00 (U.S. Dollars) fee will be charged to famous name and
trademark holders to cover the costs of mark name ownership research and
verification.
vii)
If more than one claim is made for the same domain-name the rules of
arbitration and mediation set by WIPO will be followed.
viii)
.KIDS Domains, Inc. may offer the opportunity to all claimants of the
same second-level domain-names to a distribution page which would show the
user a list of sites operating under the same name.
ix)
If all parties agree a
lottery may be held to determine the owner of the second-level domain-name.
a) In
this phase .KIDS will develop a “glamour” list of the top 1000 to 2000
words/names and will seek to sell these domain names using an established,
well-respected, online auction service. The
proceeds of this auction will be distributed to a newly formed public charity,
chartered to distribute the funds as follows:
i) 50%
to the support of the infrastructure pursuing worthwhile endeavors toward the
safety of children using the Internet.
ix)
50% allocated by the Board of Directors of the Public Foundation to
charities whose mission is to feed, clothe, or enrich the lives of children
around the world.
x)
Subsequent annual registration fees for these names will be 25% of the
auctioned price. This fee will
forever be established as a reoccurring donation to the charity fund.
Upon transfer of
ownership the registration policy, the annual registration fee to charitable
contribution, will remain in place.
Note: All domains are transferable, but restrictions and
regulations transfer with the name.
b)
A month-long period will be initiated where registrants can claim names
not trademarked or part of the charitable lottery program.
All applicants must be registered users and agree to .KIDS Domains,
Inc. Terms and Conditions, as well as, pay the registration fee.
i)
Users will be able to go to the .kids site and enter a list of 10 names
that they would like to register. Applicants
will be encouraged to prioritize their choices from high to low.
ii)
Applicants will be assigned a random priority position, generated by a
computer, in the selection process and will be overseen by a large, reputable
accounting firm.
iii)
A computer will generate random priority assignments, essentially
placing the applicants in line for their domains.
iv)
Our computer system will then go through the line processing the
requests of the applicants according to their randomly assigned number.
The domain name highest on an applicant’s list and still available
for registration will be assigned to the applicant. Applicants will be able to
register only one (1) domain-name on their list.
v)
Applicants must have their website under construction or online within
120 days from the date of registration.
Registration
will be opened to all requests. All
terms and conditions must be followed upon the grant of a domain-name,
including Terms of Use and “Guidelines”.
During open registration, prospective registrants will also be required
to register as users, and in doing so expressly acknowledge the Terms of Use
and “Guidelines”.
Is Anyone Watching the Kids?
From The Standard.com, June 05, 2000
Youth: Next on the
Net
Online
youth are 16 million strong. This year kids and teens will make up one-quarter
of the U.S. Net population.
By David Lake
The Internet was once
just a rarified toy for adults, but by the end of this year kids and teens
will make up one-quarter of the Net population. School is the most popular
access point, with more than 80 percent of youths age 10 to 17 saying they
surf the Net at school, according to a joint study by the Kaiser Family
Foundation and National Public Radio. Almost 63 percent of U.S. public-school
classrooms had Internet access by year-end 1999, up from just 14 percent in
1996, according to the National Center for Education
Statistics.
Once online, kids are hooked. Seventy percent of online students
say they use the Web at least once a week from home or school, and 35 percent
report using the Net almost every day. On average, they spent almost 7 hours
per month online – three hours less than adults – says Nielsen NetRatings.
Among the late teens-early 20s crowd, Forrester Research estimates
that 56 percent will surf the Web this year. About 9 million of these users
will buy products online, bringing online spending in this age group to $4.5
billion. Top product purchases for online youths include music, books and
clothing. Forrester also reports that 30 percent of these young adults are
going online to be entertained, while another 32 percent say communication is
their prime motivation for surfing the Web.