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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.<ref>[http://www.travel.travel/index.php/about-travel/ About .travel]</ref>
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.<ref>[http://www.travel.travel/index.php/about-travel/ About .travel]</ref>


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),<ref>[http://www.travelweekly.com/Travel-News/Online-Travel/Tralliance-is-sold;-dot-travel-domain-now-privately-held/ Travel Weekly - Tralliance is sold; dot-travel domain now privately held]</ref> in order to keep the TLD  from bankruptcy.<ref>[http://www.internetnews.me/2007/05/20/tralliance-in-trouble-travel-could-die/ Tralliance in Trouble]</ref> 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.<ref>[http://www.travelweekly.com/Travel-News/Online-Travel/Tralliance-is-sold;-dot-travel-domain-now-privately-held/ Travel Weekly - Tralliance is sold; dot-travel domain now privately held]</ref> 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.<ref>[http://www.theglobe.com/ TheGlobe.com]</ref>
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),<ref>[http://www.travelweekly.com/Travel-News/Online-Travel/Tralliance-is-sold;-dot-travel-domain-now-privately-held/ Travel Weekly - Tralliance is sold; dot-travel domain now privately held]</ref> in order to keep the TLD  from bankruptcy.<ref>[http://www.internetnews.me/2007/05/20/tralliance-in-trouble-travel-could-die/ Tralliance in Trouble]</ref> 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.<ref>[http://www.travelweekly.com/Travel-News/Online-Travel/Tralliance-is-sold;-dot-travel-domain-now-privately-held/ Travel Weekly - Tralliance is sold; dot-travel domain now privately held]</ref> 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.<ref>[http://www.theglobe.com/ TheGlobe.com]</ref>


==Requirements==
==Requirements==

Revision as of 01:23, 24 August 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
Website: 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 is 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]

Tralliance requires that, when a .travel domain name is registered, a website with relevant content must be put up within one year of registration.

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.[8]

References[edit | edit source]