On 11:41 30/07, Vittorio Bertola via UA-discuss wrote:
Il 29/07/2021 22:42 John Levine via UA-discuss <ua-discuss@icann.org> ha scritto:
Indeed, but there is little reason for people who run web sites to care. As we know, the new TLDs have largely failed, and the largest ones are basically fashion accessories in China, where they are unlikely to be used for e-mail. I can make an argument for IDN and EAI support in that it makes the net accessible to people who don't speak languages written in latin alphabets, but I cannot make a plausible argument about why they should care about the 1300 registrants of .hockey.
Last week a friend of mine couldn't fill a form on a governmental agency website because it would reject an email address in .info, so it's not just about the newer "vanity" gTLDs - there are still people out there rejecting the ones from 2001, including those with several million registrations.
And some from 1987! Some time ago we detected sites that in their registration forms, when indicating an email "hsalgado@nic.cl" it throws a warning: "There is a problem, surely you did not mean hsalgado@nic.ca?". I was able to trace the problem to an open source javascript library that has something like 20 TLDs wired. The rest, ignored. Luckily you can force and allow an email in .cl, but it is a significant usability problem. Hugo