Jump to content

CORE: Difference between revisions

From ICANNWiki
No edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:
| logo              = Core logo.png
| logo              = Core logo.png
| type              = Non-Profit
| type              = Non-Profit
| industry          = Registrar Association
| industry          = [[Registrar]] & [[Registry]] Association
| founded          = 1996
| founded          = 1996
| founders        =  
| founders        =  

Revision as of 19:22, 15 February 2012

Type: Non-Profit
Industry: Registrar & Registry Association
Founded: 1996
Headquarters: World Trade Center II
29, route de Pré-Bois CH-1215
Geneva
Country: Switzerland
Website: Corenic.org
Key People
Marta Téllez, Business Development Manager
Roger Gamper, Operations Manager

CORE, or the Internet Council of Registrars, is a non-profit organization formed in 1996 based on the Generic Top Level Domains-Memorandum of Understanding (gTLD-MoU) for assisting the launch of new domain name spaces. It was created to administer the worldwide registration of new domain names on the internet. The original TLDs involved were: .firm, .shop, .web, .arts, .rec, .info, .cat and .nom.[1] It is an ICANN accredited registrar.

CORE has developed protocols and methodologies to facilitate domain registration, as well as a multi-protocol Shared Registration System (SRS) and registration gateway. SRS and Gateway help CORE members (Registrars) to register and maintain the domain names for their customers.[2] CORE has sponsored the 39th ICANN Meeting in Cartagena, Columbia, the 38th ICANN Meeting in Brussels, Belgium, and the 36th ICANN Meeting in Seoul, South Korea.[3]

Registry Solutions

CORE has supported the launch of 3 TLDs through various registry back-end service packages, those TLDs are .aero (2002), .museum (2003), and .cat (2006).[4] CORE currently provides technical registry services for two gTLDs and operates a neutral shared channel connecting registries to registrars for all existing gTLDs and many ccTLDs. CORE is also a registry services provider for new gTLDs.[5]

History

CORE was launched through work with leaders in internet governance and liberalization, ISOC, and IANA in the fall 1996. The organization grew out of the gTLD-MoU, which involved hundreds of companies and individuals. Those involved with CORE's foundation believed that the internet was ill-equipped, from its inception as a mainly academic resource, to grow into its role as a community tool that needed more competition and de-regulation. CORE is funded by its registrars, 85 in international markets and 23 in the U.S., all of whom are dedicated to fairness and competition on the internet.[6]

New gTLDs

SportAccord, an international federation of Sporting associations with backing from the Olympic federation, announced ahead of the launch of ICANN's new gTLD program in January, 2012, that it had chosen CORE as its registry services provider. Their application, for .sport, was one among many, but they further distinguished themselves by noting that theirs would be a Community Application.[7]

Executive Committee

The latest CORE Executive Committee elections happened in July, 2007, via electronic vote.

Current Members

See also

References