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[[Category:Australia]] | [[Category:Australia]] | ||
[[Category:CcTLD]] |
Revision as of 19:26, 16 July 2024
.au is the country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for Australia. It is administered by auDA (.au Domain Administration Ltd).
History[edit | edit source]
The .au ccTLD was established in 1986 and it was delegated to Robert Elz, a network programmer at the University of Melbourne. After growing, The Australian Internet community decided to establish a private-sector self-regulatory body capable of administering the ccTLD. The administration went to auDA in 2000.[1]
Rules[edit | edit source]
Australian Presence[edit | edit source]
It necessary to have an Australian presence, and one must fit in one of the following criteria:
- an Australian citizen or an Australian permanent resident visa holder;
- a company registered under the Corporations Act 2001(Cth);
- a Registrable Body means a registrable Australian body or a foreign company under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) which has an Australian Registered Body Number (ARBN);
- an Incorporated Association under State or Territory legislation;
- an entity issued with an Australian Business Number under the A New Tax System (Australian Business Number) Act 1999(Cth);
- an Indigenous Corporation registered under the Corporations (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander) Act 2006(Cth) on the Register of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Corporations;
- a Registered Organisation that is: (a) an association of employers; (b) an association of employees (union); or (c) an enterprise association; registered under the Fair Work (Registered Organisations) Act 2009(Cth) and which appears on the Register of Organisations;
- a Cooperative registered under State or Territory legislation and which appears on the State or Territory register of cooperatives;
- a Charity registered under the Australian Charities and Not-for-Profits Act 2012(Cth), and which appears on the Australian Charities and Not-for-Profits Commission’s Charities and Not-for-Profits Register;
- a Political Party registered under the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 (Cth) or State or Territory Electoral Act and which appears on the Register of Political Parties or as otherwise named;
- a Partnership under the relevant Australian State or Territory law where at least one of the partners are Australian citizens or permanent resident visa holders or an Australian body corporate;
- an Unincorporated Association formed in an Australian State or Territory with at least its management committee being Australian citizens or permanent resident visa holders;
- a Trust where the trustee must be an Australian citizen or the trustee is an Australian body corporate;
- an Educational Institution regulated under an Australian State, Territory or Commonwealth law;
- Government, being either the Crown or a Commonwealth, State or Territory statutory agency;
- a Commonwealth entity as defined in section 10 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013(Cth);
- the applicant or owner of an Australian Trade Mark can rely upon that application or registration to establish an Australian presence, but only in respect of a domain name that is an exact match of the words which are the subject of the Australian Trade Mark application or registration.[2]
Domain Name Availability[edit | edit source]
A Domain Name will be available where:
- it is not already registered as a Domain Name in the Namespace applied for;
- it is not a Reserved Name; and
- it complies with the syntax criteria for Domain Names in the Namespace.
A Person must not apply to register a name which is deceptively similar to a Namespace in the .au ccTLD. A Domain Name is deceptively similar to a Namespace when it is likely to deceive or cause confusion to users of the Internet. Also, where the name omits or repeats a letter contained in the name of a second level Namespace in the .au ccTLD, for example, comm.au being similar to com.au.
The following categories of reserved Domain Names are not available to be registered as a domain name:
- a word, Acronym or abbreviation that is restricted or prohibited under an Australian law;
- a name or abbreviation of an Australian state or territory, including the word ‘Australia’; or
- names that may pose a risk to the security, stability and integrity of the .au and global Domain Name System.
However, a Person may apply for the registration of a Domain Name whose use is prohibited under Australian law, if:
- the Person is a statutory authority for whom the name has been restricted for their use;
- the Person has Ministerial consent to use the name and a copy of that consent is provided to .au Domain Administration; or
- the Person is not captured by the relevant prohibition.[3]