Thursday, June 2, 2011

US Laws Remain Set To Govern The Coming Multilingual Internet thru ICANN's New gTLDs As ICANN Publishes Its Last Applicant Guidebook For Its Board Consideration.

Ankabooot Breaking News:

US Laws Remain Set To Govern The Coming Multilingual Internet thru ICANN's New gTLDs As ICANN Publishes Its Last Applicant Guidebook For Its Board Consideration.

ICANN published its 7th and supposed final New gTLD Applicant Guidebook in preparation for its board consideration on June 20th during its Singapore meeting.

To many nations and citizens around the world, especially the Non-English speaking communities, this will be seen as a strategically alarming direction for the global Internet. US laws remain set to govern ICANN's New gTLDs and the coming multilingual Internet in languages like Arabic, Chinese, Urdu, Cyrillic and many others which these New gTLDs will bring with them.

The clause on US laws appears on page 27 of the last Guidebook under the heading "Legal Compliance". It remained unchanged, un-discussed, and un-addressed by ICANN since Guidebook version 5 (DAG 5) came out last year despite many official open letters and interventions to ICANN.

Under this rule any applicant or entity whether Chinese, Russian or Arab, and regardless of their nationality, will be screened against U.S. laws and its economic and trade sanction program administered by the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) of the U.S. Department of the Treasury. These U.S. Sanctions are imposed on certain countries, entities and individuals that appear on its OFAC's list of Specially Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons (the SDN List).

People, entities and countries the U.S. deems undesirable, or who don’t meet U.S. foreign policy agenda can be listed. Applicants for any New gTLD in any language that are named on such list will be refused by ICANN per this "legal compliance" clause that invokes U.S laws.

On this latest news Multilingual Internet Group, Ankabooot and MINC Chairman Khaled Fattal said: "There is a great realistic risk now that many governments and local language communities would boycott the New gTLD program. Some governments may actively start to consider deploying their own alternative Internets globally with serious economic and political consequences. The Internet we all use today, which is U.S. controlled and ICANN managed on their behalf, will no longer remain the only Internet root. We warned ICANN and the U.S. about this many times publicly and privately."

It is worth noting that ICANN had initially stipulated in Version 4 of its Guidebook (DAG4) under the same legal compliance that "Terrorism checks" will be conducted on all applicants while it provided no definitions whatsoever. This was strongly objected for by Chairman Khaled Fattal to ICANN Executives and its board that subsequently led to the deletion of the "terrorism check" from Guidebook 4 by a board resolution. ICANN subsequently replaced "Terrorism Checks" with US laws, OFAC and SDN in versions 5, 6 and now 7, its last.

ICANN’s new publication was accompanied by Explanatory Memoranda related to implementation and communication plans as well as analysis of the public comment received on the previous Guidebook version. Yet, little or no mention of the public concern ICANN received on the matter of US laws has been accounted for.

ICANN did note the diplomatic cooperation and compromise on many issues between its Board and its Government Advisory Committee (GAC) on the Applicant Guidebook 7.

Read the full article with linkks on Ankabooot News

Monday, May 16, 2011

Ankabooot.com Breaking News: ICANN's Newly Approved TLD for Dot xxx for Porn Announces its Pricing. Up to $650 for a .xxx domain - or to keep your name off it.

Ankabooot.com Breaking NewsICANN's Newly Approved  TLD for Dot xxx for Porn Announces its Pricing. Up to $650 for a .xxx domain - or to keep your name off it.

By Kevin Murphy - The Register.co.uk


Pornographers and brand owners can expect to pay between $75 and $650 to register .xxx domain names, newly published registrar pricing schemes have revealed.

Trademark owners concerned about having their brands associated with online pornography may be hit especially hard by the forthcoming domain launch, according to reports in the trademark press.

ICM Registry, the Florida company granted the right to run the .xxx top-level domain by ICANN in March, today published details of its launch plan, which includes three mechanisms for registering domains in advance of the full go-live date, expected in December.

Trademark holders will get a 30-day window, starting in early September, in which they can apply to have their brands permanently "blocked" in .xxx.

Disney, for example, will be able to pay a one-time fee in order to have disney.xxx resolve to a standard place-holder page managed by the registry.

The idea is to give family-friendly non-porn brands the opportunity to distance themselves from online porn, without having to also run the risk of cybersquatting.

About 60 registrars have been provisionally approved to sell .xxx domain names, and a few of them have already revealed their pricing. For the "block" service, trademark holders can expect to pay between $249 and $648, depending on registrar and volume.

A report in World Trademark Review (registration required) this morning suggests that some brand owners may shell out over $100,000 in what it calls a ".xxx tax", if they choose to defensively enforce their entire portfolio of hundreds of valuable trademarks.

They are under no obligation to do so, of course. ICM has some of the highest prices and strongest intellectual property rights protection mechanisms of any domain extension to date, which may help to discourage mass cybersquatting.

"There will be a range of sanctions for registrants who violate the policies relating to intellectual property infringement, culminating in expulsion and loss of the registrant's domain name(s)," ICM president Stuart Lawley said.

ICM has previously said it plans to enforce lifetime bans on repeat cybersquatters. Cyber-baddies could also lose their entire .xxx portfolio if they repeatedly lose cybersquatting complaints.

The company has also said it plans to give trademark holders a way to shut down infringing .xxx sites in just 48 hours, modelled on Digital Millennium Copyright Act take-down notices. Full details of this process, and of the X-strikes-and-you're-out process, have not yet been finalised, however.

Porn sites can expect to pay about $300 if they want to claim their .xxx domains before the official launch. They do not have to own a trademark, however – simply owning a string in an existing extension such as .com or .co.uk will be sufficient to register during ICM's "sunrise" period.

In the event that a porn site and a non-porn site both apply for the same domain name, the porn site will be given priority, although they will be given a warning that a trademark owner is also interested in the domain, and may find themselves on the receiving end of a complaint.

When .xxx names become generally available, registrants will likely have to pay between $75 and $130 for their domains. This compares to a .com price that is regularly around the $10 mark, which has been a sore point for many in the adult entertainment business, who see .xxx as an unwanted cash grab.