ICANN
may consider domain name for children
By Patricia
Jacobus
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
September 29, 2000, 2:55 p.m. PT
San Diego father Page Howe is looking to build a
children's playground on the Net by applying for a new
Internet address system that ends with ".kids."
Howe, 37, has until Monday
night to submit his request to members of the Internet
Corporation of Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), the
governing body that is accepting
proposals for expanding the pool of domain names beyond
".com," ".net" and ".org."
"There is a lot of
content on the Web that is not appropriate for kids,"
said Howe, a father of four--two infants and two
teenagers. "This way, children will have a place to
go that is safe and entertaining."
It is also a way for
advertisers to target a hard-sought segment of the
population. But Kids Domain, Howe's company, would control
the ".kids" domain name database, monitor what
crosses the screens of their young audience, and kick off
any Web site or advertiser that takes advantage of its
viewers.
Howe has already spent
$500,000 for the address system application and set aside
an additional $10 million for Kids Domain. Whether his
idea will become a reality would be in the hands of
ICANN's 19-member board.
ICANN had for years been
considering expanding the domain name suffixes, but it
wasn't until July that the board unanimously passed a
resolution to allow more addresses on the network. While
some special two-letter country codes, such as
".us" for the United States, have been
established since the mid-1990s, no other domain suffixes
have been approved since 1980.
Adding new suffixes to the
registry allows Web surfers to more easily search for
specific topics. Travel agencies, for example, could use
".travel," or children's sites could use Howe's
".kids."
ICANN was chosen in 1998 to take over the Internet naming
system. Until then, Network Solutions (NSI) had held a monopoly
on the addresses. Now there are about 60 companies that
register domain names, an important first step to getting
an identity on the Internet.
But NSI, acquired
by VeriSign in March, still controls the registry, a
database where all the names ending with ".com,"
".net" and ".org" are stored.
Expanding the Net address
book would also open the registry to competition, said
Andrew McLaughlin, ICANN’s chief policy officer.
The tricky part will be to
make sure the domain name system doesn’t get flooded
with litigation over the new suffixes. In other words,
trademark protections would have to apply no matter what
the address reads, McLaughlin said.
Monday’s deadline for
applications will be followed by a two-week comment
period. The applications will eventually be posted to the
ICANN Web site for
review.
As for Howe, he said he
hopes to create ".kids" as a place for children
to surf that would be free of smut and other undesirable
information. Before joining his domain, companies would
have to sign a contract agreeing to keep their sites
clean. If they break the contract, they lose their Web
address.
"This would solve
some of the decency issues on the Internet," he said.
"If we get rejected this time around, we'll just keep
trying until ICANN thinks it's a good idea."
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