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Updated delegation details.
 
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{{TLD|
{{TLD|
|logo  =
|logo  =
|status = Proposed
|status = Delegated
|manager  =
|manager  =
|country  = International
|country  = International
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'''.pet''' is a proposed [[TLD]] in [[ICANN]]'s [[New gTLD Program]].  
'''.pet''' is a delegated [[TLD]] in [[ICANN]]'s [[New gTLD Program]]. [[Afilias]] manages the TLD and is its [[Registry]]. The proposed application succeeded and was delegated to the [[Root Zone]] on 26 July, 2015.<ref name="delegation">[http://newgtlds.icann.org/en/program-status/delegated-strings Delegated String, ICANN.org] Retrieved 30 Jul 2015</ref>


==Applicant==
==Applicant==

Latest revision as of 20:33, 30 July 2015

Status: Delegated
country: International
Type: Generic
Category: Lifestyle

More information:

.pet is a delegated TLD in ICANN's New gTLD Program. Afilias manages the TLD and is its Registry. The proposed application succeeded and was delegated to the Root Zone on 26 July, 2015.[1]

Applicant[edit | edit source]

  1. Afilias

Previous Applicant[edit | edit source]

  1. Google (Charleston Road Registry Inc.)[2]

String Confusion Objection[edit | edit source]

Google submitted a String Confusion Objection to the International Centre for Dispute Resolution (ICDR) (a division of the AAA) on March 13, 2013, asserting that .pet and .pets are confusingly similar.[3] .pets' only applicant is Donuts, but a ruling by Richard Page of the ICDR that agrees with objection may put Donuts into the same contention set with current .pet applicants Google and Afilias. This ruling came as a surprise as similar String Confusion Objections for .hotel vs. .hotels and .car vs. .cars did not find the plural form of the strings to be confusingly similar.[4] A second panelist agreed with Google's objection in a report published on September 19, 2013[5].

Private auction[edit | edit source]

On the 8th December 2014, it was reported that Afilias had won the right to run .pet after Google withdrew its application for .pet and Donuts withdrew its bid for pets. This was the first time a private auction had been used to settle a new GTLD contention set containing two different strings.[6]

References[edit | edit source]