As the first two Uniregistry New TLDs, .sexy and .tattoo, became generally available in February 2014, many Domain industry members noticed that some of the leading [[Registrars]] were not selling these TLDs. Companies such as [[GoDaddy]] and [[Register.com]] did not initially sign up to sell these TLDs because Uniregistry's [[Registry-Registrar Agreement]] would require Registrars to provide real names and contact info to Uniregistry.<ref>[http://domainincite.com/15913-heres-why-registrars-are-boycotting-sexy Here's Why Registrars Are Boycotting .sexy, DomainIncite] Retrieved 25 Feb 2014</ref> By the end of 2014 more than 150 registrars worldwide including all major registrars had signed Uniregistry's agreement and were retailing Uniregistry extensions. Uniregistry's registrar has grown quickly and been lauded as a generational leap forward in the management of domain names. | As the first two Uniregistry New TLDs, .sexy and .tattoo, became generally available in February 2014, many Domain industry members noticed that some of the leading [[Registrars]] were not selling these TLDs. Companies such as [[GoDaddy]] and [[Register.com]] did not initially sign up to sell these TLDs because Uniregistry's [[Registry-Registrar Agreement]] would require Registrars to provide real names and contact info to Uniregistry.<ref>[http://domainincite.com/15913-heres-why-registrars-are-boycotting-sexy Here's Why Registrars Are Boycotting .sexy, DomainIncite] Retrieved 25 Feb 2014</ref> By the end of 2014 more than 150 registrars worldwide including all major registrars had signed Uniregistry's agreement and were retailing Uniregistry extensions. Uniregistry's registrar has grown quickly and been lauded as a generational leap forward in the management of domain names. |