New.net
Offers Market-based Solution to TLD Expansion
By Kathleen
Murphy
In an end run around
the red tape created by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and
Numbers, an Idealab-backed startup began offering alternative top-level
domain names (TLDs) Monday.
Directly challenging
the authority of ICANN,
which is the nonprofit body chosen by the U.S. government to oversee Web
addresses, New.net
said it is releasing 20 new TLDs, including .shop, .mp3, .inc, .kids,
.sport, .family, .chat, .video, .club, .hola, .soc, .med, .law, .travel,
.game, .free, .ltd, .gmbh, .tech, and .xxx.
New.net is selling
domain names in the 20 strings on a first-come, first-served basis for a
$25 annual fee. Buyers in the .kids TLD, operated in partnership with
.KIDS Domains (a rejected applicant in the ICANN TLD-selection process),
must offer "kid-friendly content," and the company reserves
the right to revoke names that it believes aren't used accordingly.
The company announced
strategic relationships with Internet service providers including
EarthLink, Excite@Home, and NetZero. MP3.com will be the exclusive
third-party seller of .mp3 domain names. New.net also partnered with
UltraDNS to provide global domain name system (DNS) services.
"This new naming
system ultimately will be turned on by ISPs all over the world,"
said David Hernand, CEO of New.net. "Already this morning, we're
getting calls from other ISPs that want to turn us on, so we think it's
just a matter of time before all ISPs choose to recognize our names to
give their users that benefit."
While fighting the
uphill battle of achieving recognition by ISPs, New.net also will allow
Windows users to gain access through their browsers via a plug-in.
Whether on an individual browser level via the New.net plug-in, or
through software resident on a participating ISP's server, requests to
display Web pages with New.net domain names are resolved by appending
the additional extension .new.net onto the address. As a result,
requests are automatically routed to New.net's DNS servers to determine
the correct IP address of the computer hosting the Web page. New.net is
not exactly creating a new root; its system rides on top of the existing
DNS.
"We don't see our
business as running in conflict with ICANN, rather, we think of this as
a supplement to what ICANN has done thus far," Hernand said.
"We are a market-based solution to the naming system in contrast
with a political-based solution specifically relating to names that has
moved slowly. We hope to move quickly into this space to provide
consumers the names that they want now."