> Based on this encoding system - is there any chance that two strings using > different character sets would translate to the same ASCII string? > > That would definitely cause problems (and is mathematically rare, but > still statistically possible). I'm sure this could happen in theory since we're talking about multiple languages. But if it did, the second party would not be able to register the name since it would already be taken... Sort of like two companies both named "amazon" - only one is going to get the amazon.com domain. Just my 2 cents.
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? DomainGuideBook.com
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? Steve Hsieh
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??... Bob Garth
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain na... Doytchin Spiridonov
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domai... Bob Garth
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? Doug McDonald
- RE: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? Bill Gerrard
- Re[2]: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? Sergei V. Kolodka
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? Tiger Technologies
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? Charles Daminato
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? Steve Hsieh
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? James H. Cloos Jr.
- Re[2]: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? Sergei V. Kolodka
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? Christopher Masto
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? Tiger Technologies
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? Derek J. Balling
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? Fagyal Csongor
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? Dave Warren
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? Eric Paynter
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? Charles Daminato
- Re: Not ASCII chars in domain name ??? Tiger Technologies
