automating the world, one script at a time
International Domain Names Are Coming in 2010
This really is quite big. For the first time people other than those that use the 26 letter english alphabet will be able to use a character set they are used to on a keyboard they are used to.
DNS servers all over the world will need to be patched or updated to handle all of these characters, so I suspect there will be some migration and adoption pain, but in the end it will be good for everyone.
The short video from the Mashable article below lays it out pretty well.
The face of the Internet is about to change, and its potential impact on international Internet use cannot be understated.
Earlier today, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), which governs domains, registrations, Internet Protocol addresses, and many other aspects of the net, voted to approve a fast-track process for implementing non-Latin domain names by early to mid 2010.
This means that by next year, you could be seeing domains in Arabic, Japanese, Chinese, and dozens of other non-Latin languages.
The new domains, which ICANN terms ‘Internationalized Domain Names’ or IDNs, has been something the organization has discussed for several years, but now IDNs have been placed on a fast track process, beginning November 16th. It will involve around 100 new, international characters on top of the traditional 26-character English alphabet.ICANN even takes the time to explain the impact of IDNs with a 7:10 video. In it, people from nations across (along with ICANN President Rod Beckstrom) the world discuss how IDNs will help them use localized keyboards and local email addresses. It’s a bit silly, but it really nails the key point: it’s time to expand domains to the native languages of over half the world. The video is below:
(Via Mashable!.)
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| Print article | This entry was posted by Gordon on November 1, 2009 at 07:51, and is filed under Featured, General. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback from your own site. |
about 2 years ago
People holding non-latin domains will have URLs fail validation on all the forms out there that haven’t been modified for this new change.
about 2 years ago
What with the relaxation already planned for extensions next year (eg domain.nyc etc), adding these changes in, the internet is going to be very different in 5 years time! Billions upon billions of domain name options…