Tralliance: Difference between revisions
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==Requirements== | ==Requirements== | ||
Registrants must be verified participants in the travel industry. This can include anything from airlines, to public attractions, to ferries, restaurants, | Registrants must be verified participants in the travel industry. This can include anything from airlines, to public attractions, to ferries, restaurants, bed & breakfast houses, and more. | ||
Tralliance requires that, when a .travel domain name is registered, a website with relevant content must be put up within one year of registration.<ref>[http://www.travel.travel/index.php/faqs/ Tralliance FAQ]</ref> | Tralliance requires that, when a .travel domain name is registered, a website with relevant content must be put up within one year of registration.<ref>[http://www.travel.travel/index.php/faqs/ Tralliance FAQ]</ref> |
Revision as of 20:42, 25 February 2011
Type: | Privately Held |
Industry: | Domain Registry |
Ownership: | Tralliance Registry Management Company (2008) |
Headquarters: | 1500 Cordova Road, Suite 302 Fort Lauderdale Florida 33316 |
Country: | USA |
Products: | .travel TLD |
Website: | http://www.travel.travel |
Key People | |
Edward Cespedes, President & CEO Patricia Vigilante, Director of Administration Byron Henderson, Advisor of Registry Policy Shameka Griffin, Manager of Customer Care Michael Egan, Board Member[1] |
Tralliance (a portmanteau of "travel alliance") is the registry for the .travel TLD. .travel meant exclusively for usage by organizations in the travel and tourism industries.[2]
History[edit | edit source]
On May 5, 2005, ICANN signed a contract with Tralliance to operate .travel. The operating procedures and policies for .travel are different from those of all other current TLDs.[3]
Until February 2008, Tralliance was a publicly traded subsidiary of TheGlobe.com. On Feb. 1, TheGlobe announced that it had sold Tralliance to the privately-held Tralliance Registry Management Company (TRMC),[4] in order to keep the TLD from bankruptcy.[5] Despite the sale, ultimate ownership of the TLD did not change, as Michael Egan, owner and chairman of TheGlobe.com, and Edward Cespedes, president of Tralliance, together own TRMC.[6] TheGlobe.com is to receive an earn-out equal to 10% of TRMC's net revenue derived from .travel names registered through May 5, 2015.[7]
Requirements[edit | edit source]
Registrants must be verified participants in the travel industry. This can include anything from airlines, to public attractions, to ferries, restaurants, bed & breakfast houses, and more.
Tralliance requires that, when a .travel domain name is registered, a website with relevant content must be put up within one year of registration.[8]