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U.S. Online Users Shun '.us' Names 

   By ANICK JESDANUN 
   AP Internet Writer 

   NEW YORK (AP) � Americans, it seems, prefer any other
   identity but their own. 

   Internet addresses tagged with a country code � such as
   ``name.fr'' for France � may be a source of national pride
   around the world, but ''.us'' is this country's forgotten
   stepchild. 

   And that worries the U.S. government, which last week began
   seeking suggestions on making ''.us'' more desirable to help
   relieve the crowded field of dot-com addresses. 

   Good luck. 

   Changing habits won't be easy in a country used to ending
addresses with ''.com,'' ''.net''
   and ''.org,'' which are supposed to be global identifiers but are
dominated by U.S. sites. 

   Roger Cochetti, a senior vice president at Network Solutions
Inc., said the popularity of the
   global suffixes reflect Americans' vision of the Net as an
international medium. 

   ``They are equally comfortable examining museums in France or
Greece as they are online
   museums in the United States,'' he said. ``They are equally
comfortable doing research on a
   British Web site or a Canadian Web site.'' 

   Some groups and businesses even prefer other countries'
abbreviations � such as ''.tv'' for
   Tuvalu and ''.md'' for Moldova. The use of ''.us'' is largely
limited to local government
   agencies, schools and community groups, even though it is open to
any U.S. site. 

   Even the U.S. Postal Service doesn't want it anymore. Though the
post office once
   considered claiming ''.us'' for customers, postal spokeswoman Sue
Brennan said the
   agency will now concentrate on assigning e-mail addresses through
``usps.com.'' It became
   a dot-com this year, dropping allegiances to ''.gov'' for
government. 

   The ''.us'' suffix is one of 244 assigned to countries and
territories worldwide. It is such a
   source of identity that Palestinians recently obtained ''.ps''
and the European Union wants
   ''.eu'' to unify European businesses. 

   The Commerce Department believes the ''.us'' real estate is
underpopulated because of the
   way such addresses are assigned. 

   A Los Angeles business that sells clothing is thus supposed to
register under
   ``clothingstore.los-angeles.ca.us'' rather than simply
``clothingstore.us.'' 

   It's difficult to remember such a long name. It's also difficult
to figure out who assigns it,
   since such assignments are delegated to some 800 individuals and
organizations. 

   So Americans have gravitated instead to ''.com,'' ''.net'' and
''.org,'' which are registered
   through Network Solutions and other companies heavily promoting
the ease of doing so. 

   Under the Commerce Department proposal, a new administrator would
replace the
   University of Southern California's Information Sciences
Institute � where Internet
   domain pioneer Jon Postel worked until his 1998 death � as master
keeper of the ''.us''
   domains. 

   Experts believe such a designated organization or company would
be able to market ''.us''
   to commercial entities more effectively. 

   The proposal comes as simple dot-com names become harder to
obtain. 

   It is separate from a plan to add a half-dozen or so new global
suffixes, such as ''.movie''
   and ''.shop,'' by early next year to relieve some of the dot-com
overcrowding. 

   Michael Sondow, who runs an online forum for individuals,
nonprofit groups and smaller
   businesses, fears that ''.us'' will ``turn into another commodity
to be exploited by craven
   registrars and their greedy clients.'' 

   ``Everyone had hoped that the .us would be reorganized as sort of
a refuge for the person,
   noncommercial, nonprofit sector,'' he said. 

   Commerce officials offered few details but several questions for
the Internet community,
   including whether to keep the structure tied to locality and
whether to reserve some names
   for personal, noncommercial use. 

   Revamping ''.us'' has been under discussions for at least two
years. The Commerce
   Department did not say when it would make a final ruling. 

   ��� 

   On the Net: 

   Department of Commerce domain names info:
   http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/domainname/domainhome.htm 

   Network Solutions: http://networksolutions.com 

   .us registry: http://www.nic.us 

   Sondow's site: http://www.iciiu.org

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