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ICANN News

  • TAS Reopens
    Statement by Akram Atallah, COO
    21 May 2012

    The TLD Application System, or TAS, has reopened. All registered applicants can now log in, review and submit their applications.

    The system will remain open until 23:59 GMT/UTC on 30 May 2012. Consistent with our previous practice and to allow the application window to open as soon as possible, two-hour maintenance windows have been scheduled as follows: 22 May at 16:30 GMT/UTC, 25 May at 23:00 UTC, and 29 May at 22:00 UTC.

    Applicants are encouraged to review "Top Things Users Should Know When TAS Reopens," posted on the new gTLD microsite at http://newgtlds.icann.org/en/applicants/tas/top-ten. The document provides advice on logging into and completing applications, submitting wire transfers, and contacting customer service with any issues users might encounter.

    During the last few weeks, we have fixed the technical glitch that caused us to take the system offline. Also, to address user feedback, we have improved the overall system performance and the HTML preview function.

    In our continuing review of the system logs and system traffic, we determined that in two instances, a single file might have been temporarily unavailable to an applicant. Full access to those two files has been restored. ICANN notified the affected users.

    We recognize and regret the inconvenience caused by this glitch and the delayed closing of the application window.

  • Approved July 2012 - June 2015 Strategic Plan Posted
    18 May 2012

    Based upon the Board Resolutions resulting from the recent Special Meeting of the Board of Directors held in Amsterdam on 6 May 2012, the adopted 2012-2015 Strategic Plan [PDF, 864 KB] is now posted.

    2012-2015 Strategic Plan

    • English [PDF, 864 KB]
    • العربية - coming soon
    • 中文 - coming soon
    • Français - coming soon
    • Español - coming soon
    • Русский - coming soon

    During the Special Meeting of the Board of Directors held in Amsterdam the Board approved the July 2012-June 2015 Strategic Plan, and directed the President and CEO to move forward with the Internationalization survey and community-based operational planning process based on the strategic objectives as set forth in the plan. The aspects of the 2012-2015 Strategic Plan that cover the expansion of ICANN's international presence and engagement efforts are deferred pending further direction from the Board.

    Rationale for Resolution 2012.05.06.06

    To remain accountable to the global Internet community, the Board is taking this action to allow for community input on the further planning for ICANN's international presence and engagement. There has been a community survey on these items, and a paper will be produced that will be the subject of public comment and discussion. In addition, continued work towards these efforts as set forth in the 2011-2014 Strategic Plan is not prudent, therefore those portions of the 2011-2014 Strategic Plan are deferred.

    After review of these inputs, and as appropriate to respond to inputs, initiatives to expand ICANN's international presence and engagement may be updated within the 2012-2015 Strategic Plan, and included within the 2012-2013 Operating Plan. In order to allow for the 2012-2013 operational planning cycle to proceed, the Board approves the 2012-2015 Strategic Plan.

    While there will likely be a fiscal impact as a result of this work, the fiscal impact of undertaking the survey and review process is minimal. Further, the deferral of current initiatives within the 2011-2012 Operating Plan regarding the further allocation or reallocation of staff and resources that relate to ICANN's international presence and engagement prior to the Prague Meeting will preserve resources from having to be reallocated as necessary after this review is complete.

    This action is not expected to have any impact on the security or the stability of the DNS.

    This version of the Strategic Plan includes extensive community feedback, including a 45-day Public Comment period (10.3.11 – 11.17.11). Many thanks to the Community for its continued support and input.

    ICANN's Strategic Plan is a three-year rolling, annually updated strategic planning process and feeds in to the larger ICANN planning process as the adopted Strategic Plan guides the development of the FY13 Operating Plan and Budget.

  • DRAFT - ICANN Language Services Policy and Procedures
    18 May 2012
    Forum Announcement: Comment Period Opens on Date: 18 May 2012
    Categories/Tags: Policy Processes; Transparency/Accountability; Reviews/Improvements; Participation; Events/Conferences
    Purpose (Brief): ICANN Language Services is submitting for public comment the draft Language Services Policy and Procedures. The purpose of this document, although implicit in its title, is to establish policies and procedures for all services related to languages – translation, simultaneous interpretation, teleconference interpretation, transcription (of recorded sessions) and RTT (real-time-transcription, also known as scribing).
    Public Comment Box Link: http://www.icann.org/en/news/public-comment/language-services-policy-18may12-en.htm
  • New L-Root DNS Server Enhances DNS Fault Tolerance and Resistance to DDoS Attacks
    18 May 2012

    A new instance of L-Root has been installed in Odessa, Ukraine, increasing the Domain Name System's (DNS) overall fault tolerance and its resilience against certain types of cyber threats, such as Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks.

    The launch of the server node is a joint operation between ICANN and Ukrainian domain registry Hostmaster. DNS Root Servers form a key part of the Internet infrastructure that contribute to the global security and stability of the DNS.

    "Odessa is one of the largest Ukrainian cities, with one of the highest Internet penetration rates in the country," said Dmitry Kohmanyuk, a Hostmaster official. "Moreover, the Internet provider we opted for has quality connections to Western Ukraine, which is precisely why we decided to deploy the node there."

    Hostmaster, the Ukrainian administrator of the .UA domain, supplied the equipment necessary for the installation of the new L-Root node.

    "In addition to the newest L-Root server in Odessa, two other L-Root nodes, in Kyiv and Kharkiv, were also deployed through collaboration between ICANN and Hostmaster." said Joe Abley, Director of DNS Operations at ICANN."

  • Period of 17-27 May 2012: Public Comment Periods Approaching Closing Date
    17 May 2012

    The Following Public Comment periods are approaching their Comment or Reply Period Close dates, May 17-27 2012. As a member of the ICANN community, your timely feedback is critical to our accountability and transparency efforts. For your convenience, we have included direct links below to comments that will soon close.

    During the Reply period for Public Comments, participants should only address previous comments submitted and new posts concerning the topic should not be introduced. When constructing Replies, contributors are asked to cite the original poster's name, comment date, and any particular text that is pertinent.

    Please note that comments submitted after the posted Close Date/Time are not guaranteed to be considered in any final summary, analysis, reporting, or decision-making that takes place once that period ends.

    For more information please refer to the ICANN Public Comments page at: http://www.icann.org/en/news/public-comment

    Title Comment Period Close Date [UTC Time] Reply Period Close Date [UTC Time]
    Second Annual IDN ccTLD Fast Track Process Review 30 April 2012 [23:59] 21 May 2012 [23:59]
    ICANN Draft FY13 Operating Plan and Budget 24 May 2012 [23:59] 15 June 2012 [23:59]
    IDN Variant TLD Program - Revised Program Plan 25 May 2012 [23:59] 15 June 2012 [23:59]
  • TAS Interruption - Update (17 May 2012)
    Statement by Akram Atallah, COO
    17 May 2012

    As we announced last week, ICANN is targeting 22 May 2012 as the reopening date for the TLD Application System, or TAS. Specifically, we are targeting 19:00 GMT/UTC on 22 May for the reopening.

    When we took the system offline on 12 April, just over twelve hours remained in the application window. We anticipate keeping TAS open for eight full days to allow users to review their applications and complete any remaining activities. We expect to close TAS at 23:59 GMT/UTC on 30 May 2012.

    We appreciate the community’s continued interest and feedback on the TAS interruption.

Above.com Parking Manager

Home Domainer's Magazine News Adult Domaining
Adult Domaining PDF Print E-mail
Written by Domainer's Magazine Staff   
Monday, 08 September 2008 18:19
Adult domains have been around since time immemorial. Fine, I’m exaggerating. It’s been around only since the ‘public’ (non-military) internet was born. In fact, adult domaining is popular and it predates, by many years, general domaining. Adult domaining has always been pervasive, and it brought in the cash in great wads.
But is adult domaining legal?
Well, let’s just say adult domaining is not illegal – or, at least, I haven’t seen or heard anything to suggest it is illegal. In fact, it is a legitimate niche in the domaining industry; legitimacy, after all, can be based on tradition and long practice, and adult domaining is a well-established domaining sector. Online pornography – which adult domaining generally go hand in hand with – is generally frowned upon but tolerated. What constitutes pornography also varies from place to place. Adult domains that go with adult dating sites, however, have greater acceptance.
Adult domaining, moreover, is largely unregulated and non-formalized. Adult domains are treated similarly to other types of domains under ICANN rules. Adult domainers abide by the rules of the operators (domain registry) that administer to their domain extension – sex.com has to comply with Verisign Global Registry Services’ rules whereas sex.biz has to follow NeuStar Inc.
Speaking of domain extensions, do you think ICANN should approve a distinct top-level domain for sexually explicit content?
The .xxx extension is a pretty intuitive domain extension for adult content sites. Right now, this domain extension can be procured through the New.net registrar. New.net is not an ICANN-accredited registrar. The .xxx domains, moreover, are also unofficial and can be accessed only through New.net’s alternative DNS root. Sites using a domain with a dot triple extension are also not readily available to everyone; special client software or adding New.net to the URL is required.
Some believe that a distinct TLD for adult sites is a great option, especially for parents who can simply block .xxx domains from loading instead of relying on content-filtering parental controls. However, there are also concerns that giving adult domains the .xxx extension will create a bad image for the adult domaining in general.
ICANN is dragging its feet on the issue. So far, the proposal to use the .xxx top-level domain extension has been presented to ICANN three times, and in all cases, it failed to get approval.
Last Updated on Saturday, 07 July 2007 09:54
 
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