Jump to content

IDN ccTLD Fast Track Process: Difference between revisions

From ICANNWiki
Jessica (talk | contribs)
Jessica (talk | contribs)
 
Line 29: Line 29:
* [[Charles Shaban]], [[Intellectual Property Constituency]]
* [[Charles Shaban]], [[Intellectual Property Constituency]]
GNSO Observers
GNSO Observers
* [[Olga Cavalli]], [[NCA|NomCom Appointee]]
* [[Olga Cavalli]], [[Nominating Committee Appointees|NCA]]
* [[Avri Doria]], Chair of GNSO Council
* [[Avri Doria]], Chair of GNSO Council
* [[Cary Karp]], [[.museum]]
* [[Cary Karp]], [[.museum]]

Latest revision as of 16:16, 25 August 2021

ICANN's IDN ccTLD Fast Track Process was created to enable ccTLD managers to request an expedited evaluation of internationalized versions of their country's top-level domain.[1] Countries with an Alpha-2 code on the ISO 3166-1 Standard are allowed to apply for an IDN ccTLD in scripts other than Latin.[1] The strings must comply with all requirements in the Final Implementation Plan (FIP) for the process.[2]

History[edit | edit source]

The ICANN Board approved the FIP for the IDN Fast Track Process at ICANN 36 in October, 2009[3] The Process was launched on November 16, 2009.[4] The first IDN requests, from Egypt, the Russian Federation, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, were approved in January 2010.[5]

ICANN reports that as of May 2020, sixty-two string requests had passed through the Fast Track Process, on behalf of forty-three different countries.[1] As of March 2021, a total of seventy strings (including requested variant strings for a specific country) have passed through the process.[4] India accounts for fifteen IDNs, representing four languages in fifteen scripts.[6]

IDN Fast Track WG[edit | edit source]

ALAC

ccNSO

GAC

GNSO

GNSO Observers

SSAC

Technical Community

ICANN Staff

References[edit | edit source]


External Links[edit | edit source]

IDN ccTLD Final Implementation Plan (PDF)