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Bolded 'universal acceptance'.
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'''Universal Acceptance''' refers to the occurrence of users experiencing browser and email bugs when trying to use new gTLDs. Operators of new gTLDs and more visibly all IDN TLDs (gTLDs and ccTLDs) are seeing unnaturally limited demand for names in the zones and this has presented a challenge to the goals of the new gTLD program of user choice, user confidence and name space competition. Domain names in a TLD must be useable in applications regardless of the written script, length or newness of the TLD.<ref>[https://www.icann.org/resources/pages/universal-acceptance-faqs-2014-09-26-en Universal Acceptance landing page at ICANN]</ref> The four main shifts spurring the need for Universal Acceptance:
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Universal Acceptance refers to the occurrence of users experiencing browser and email bugs when trying to use new gTLDs. Operators of new gTLDs and more visibly all IDN TLDs (gTLDs and ccTLDs) are seeing unnaturally limited demand for names in the zones and this has presented a challenge to the goals of the new gTLD program of user choice, user confidence and name space competition. Domain names in a TLD must be useable in applications regardless of the written script, length or newness of the TLD.<ref>[https://www.icann.org/resources/pages/universal-acceptance-faqs-2014-09-26-en Universal Acceptance landing page at ICANN]</ref> The four main shifts spurring the need for Universal Acceptance:
    
* Longer TLD Names: TLDs with names longer than four characters, such as MUSEUM.
 
* Longer TLD Names: TLDs with names longer than four characters, such as MUSEUM.

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