Antonio, all,

On Thu, Jun 14, 2018 at 04:03:23PM +0200, Antonio Prado wrote:

> 'the second level domain (SLD) ".gov", when used, identifies only the
> administrations within the EU and the USA (as the first level) central
> government, with the exception of the United Kingdom, and not without
> distinction any central and local public administration including
> educational institutions (for which the SLD ".edu" is used) as is the
> case today in Italy.'

thanks for sharing this background.

Colleagues within CENTR (representing ccTLDs within Europe, but also
beyond as shown below) were kind enough to provide first hand information
for the following list of TLDs:

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BG      In Bulgaria the e-government law says that government agencies should 
use sub domains of gov.bg
CH      gov.ch is reserved exclusively for Swiss authorities and registered by 
the Federal Chancellery. However, it is the SLD admin.ch that is used for the 
websites of Swiss authorities. admin.ch on the other hand is not exclusively 
reserved for Swiss authorities.
CZ      gov.cz domain is registered for Ministry of the Interior of the Czech 
Republic and used as the information portal of public administration, as well 
as the third-level names are created and used by some of public authorities.
DE      has no predefined structure at the second level. gov.de is registered, 
but unrelated to government.
DK      the registrant of gov.dk is the Danish state, but it does not seem to 
be in use as such. Most governmental authorities prefer to have their own 
specific .dk domain name.
EE      The gov.ee is used by Estonian Government but it is not reserved 
exclusively for them. At .ee we don't reserve any domain names for central 
government. We have a list of reserved names for the respective local 
governments - (see regulation here 
<https://www.internet.ee/domains/special-conditions-for-registering-reserved-domains>).
ES      We have an SLD "gob.es", reserved to Government (central, regional or 
local) More precisely, art. 10.d of the 2005 National Plan on domain names 
under ".es" reserves ".gob.es" to "Spanish Public Administrations and the 
Public Bodies responsible to them, including any branches, agencies and units 
thereof." See 
http://www.dominios.es/dominios/sites/dominios/files/normativa_en1.pdf
EU      The "gov.eu" is on the list of reserved name by the EU institutions, 
and not in use
FI      gov.fi is used by Finnish Government but it is not reserved exclusively 
for them. At .fi we don't reserve any domain names for central government (or 
anyone else).
FR      I confirm that .gouv.fr is reserved to the French government. Although 
it is not clearly established that it is restricted to the "central" 
government, each registration requires the approval of the Government 
Information Service.
IE      At .ie, gov.ie is reserved for the Irish Government.  In practice, it 
appears to be used by 'central' government departments only.
IL      The SLD Gov.il is managed since the 90's by the e-GOV unit at PM 
office.  Basically, domains under GOV.il are for government bodies only 
(including parliament, central bank, regulators etc.). Local municipalities can 
register under muni.il (with 2 exceptions TelAviv.gov.il and Jerusalem.gov. Il 
for historic reasons).
JP      I hope information about non-EU ccTLD helps a bit: .go.jp is a space 
strictly for central government.  .lg.jp is a space strictly for local 
government
LT      gov.lt domain was created in 2004. The use of gov.lt domain is 
dedicated to the state institutions of the Republic of Lithuania at various 
levels of central, counties, districts and local authorities administration 
levels.
LU      gov.lu is registered by the government but is, as far as we can see, 
not used as to create third-level names
LV      .gov.lv is designated to government and a local government or other 
public persons established by law. Registrations in this subdomain are handled 
by the Latvia State Radio and Television Centre (LVRTC) according to Regulation 
of Cabinet of Ministers "Procedures by which Institutions Place Information on 
the Internet".
NL      The domain name gov.nl was originally a reserved domain name, but in 
2005 we gave our government the opportunity to register the domain name. They 
did and they seem to use it for a redirect to their main website.  As far as we 
know, there is no specific applicable law about the use of this domain name and 
the registrant is contractual free to use the domain name as he pleases.
PL      The .gov.pl is  used by central government and other governmental 
organisations according to the officially announced list.
PT      In Portugal, domain names under .gov.pt may be registered only by 
entities which are part of the Government structure of the Portuguese Republic
RO      I confirm that gov.ro and guv.ro are reserved for Romanian government.
SE      Gov.se is registered by the Swedish government and used by them.
SI      gov.si is managed by Ministy for Public Afairs and used by government 
entities.
SK      gov.sk is managed by Prime Minister's Office and reserved for 
government institutions with no clear distinction defined anywhere.
UK      The gov.uk is of course used by central government but it is not 
reserved exclusively for central govt. As you can see Oxford City Council use a 
gov.uk <https://www.oxford.gov.uk/>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Please note that a "gov" SLD (or any equivalent spelling, translation or 
transliteration)
may or may not be a 'special' SLD as per the policy of the registry and also 
there is the
orthogonal aspect (usually outside the scope of registry policy) what SLDs are 
to be
chosen for public/governmental entities.
Clearly, where gov.${cctld} exists, the list provides a variety of rules and 
practices.
It goes without saying that by explaining their specific situation, nobody is 
taking any
position regarding the case that initiated this thread.

Regards,
  Peter

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