Hi Ahmed,

 

Yes, ICANN delegated the first four TLDs (all 4 are IDNs with 1 Arabic, 1 
Chinese, and 2 Cyrillic) on October 23, and more is expected to be delegated in 
the coming weeks. In terms of web browsers, all new browsers support IDN URLs 
in all scripts. Some TLDs might face some problems with some web browsers, and 
these can be solved on 1-to-1 basis. Even some of the new ASCII TLDs need to 
resolve any pending issues with web browser developers (such as .sx and .ss). 
Overall, all web browser vendors/developers are keeping an eye on the New gTLD 
program so that they can update their whitelists accordingly.

 

>From my discussions with IDN ccTLDs in the region, I believe Egypt has the 
>largest IDN ccTLD base with more than 3,000 registrations. Saudi Arabia and 
>UAE have 2,000+. Some of the stumbling blocks that keep IDN registrations low 
>are the following:

 

·         Strict registrations policies by Registries; or

·         High pricing; or

·         Preference in communicating over ASCII TLDs (I have heard tones such 
as “What is the added value in an IDN TLD?” or “The majority of my clients do 
not speak Arabic” or “Arabic?! Really?!”); or

·         Lack of interest in IDNs since IDNs do not support global email 
exchange, SSL certificates, and many other online services (this is what the 
most complained of).

 

You mentioned some of the major portals such as Google and Yahoo!. Well, if 
they have IDN registrations, they are mostly defensive registrations; i.e. to 
protect their trademark(s) from being cyber-squatted and/or infringed.

 

I guess with the rollout of New gTLDs, much of the behavior we experience 
online will change gradually, so let us see how will major brand owners react 
to this. Furthermore, vendors such as Google (applicant of .google, amongst 
others) and Microsoft (applicant of .microsoft, amongst others) are expected to 
move their online presence to their own TLDs.

 

Finally, it is worth mentioning that there are discussions within the ICANN 
community to block registration of domain names that represent currently 
applied for TLDs (e.g. applicant of the TLD .abc gets abc.whatever blocked from 
any future registrations).

 

Fahd

(speaking in my personal capacity)

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Ahmed Abu-Abed
Sent: Sunday, October 27, 2013 11:54 AM
To: 'menog@menog. net'
Subject: [menog] New Arabic TLD and idea's popularity

 

ICANN is in the news with the new شبكة  TLD, see 
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-24637673

 

I am yet to see Arabic TLDs widely implemented, although most browsers are 
ready, even on iOS and Android which I tested with an Arabic URL. Any idea on 
why is the delay in implementing Arabic URL by content providers (newspapers, 
etc.) ? People in the region prefer Arabic websites, so I am wondering what’s 
stopping content providers from having Arabic URLs.

 

Also, anyone know if major portals, like Google or Yahoo, have implemented IDNs 
in any language for their URL ? Something like ياهو.شبكة  (which translates to 
Yahoo.net , as I cannot find an equivalent to .com as an Arabic TLD).

 

Best Regards,

Ahmed Abu-Abed

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