Interesting part of the article: "Costs Nominet suggests one solution would be for the both name to be registered. Website addresses ending in either suffix could then direct users to the same place. However, ICANN is charging $185,000 (£116,045) per application and is refusing to let Wales be a special case. The Welsh business minister, Edwina Hart, said last week that she is not considering paying for either application." Minister Hart is a member of the National Assembly for Wales, not for UK parliamentary seat, not an MP and not a minister in David Cameron's government, not with a voice in the GAC, but she through the National Assembly for Wales has some powers to make policy for Wales... confused? I know I am! Perhaps all become clear when the applications process opens. Adam On Fri, Nov 11, 2011 at 3:27 AM, Dev Anand Teelucksingh <admin@ttcsweb.org> wrote:
"A survey of Welsh businesses and consumers suggests a majority of both support the nation getting its own domain name. The move would offer website owners the chance to end their address with .wales and .cymru, instead of .uk.
Internet regulator ICANN will allow countries and other organisations to apply for the new names from January.
Supporters say it could help with branding, but critics warn it may increase the opportunity for fraud. The poll was commissioned by the not-for-profit domain registry service Nominet. It suggests 69% of consumers backed the move and 59% of Welsh businesses and other bodies.
The poll used a sample of 1,003 individuals - 21% of whom were Welsh speakers - and 250 senior decision makers in Welsh organisations However the survey suggested splits over which name to take."
Read rest of article: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-15658689 _______________________________________________ At-Large mailing list At-Large@atlarge-lists.icann.org https://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/at-large
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