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The first .nxt conference was focused on the business of new [[gTLD]]s and the future of the Internet. It was held in San Francisco on February 8-10, 2011 with 176 participants.<ref>[http://dot-nxt.com/sf-con-0211 New Internet Extension Conference]</ref>
The first .nxt conference was focused on the business of new [[gTLD]]s and the future of the Internet. It was held in San Francisco on February 8-10, 2011 with 176 participants.<ref>[http://dot-nxt.com/sf-con-0211 New Internet Extension Conference]</ref>


The topics during the inaugural conference were about integrating with [[registrars]], developing effective and winning marketing strategies, innovative business models, community outreach and the importance of choosing an expert and stable registrar as well well as policy and implementation rules to profit from new gTLDs.<ref>[http://www.afilias.info/blogs/roland-laplante/nxt-conference-inspires-and-informs-new-gtld-debate .nxt Conference Inspires and Informs New gTLD Debate]</ref>
The topics during the inaugural conference were about integrating with [[registrar]]s, developing effective and winning marketing strategies, innovative business models, community outreach and the importance of choosing an expert and stable registrar as well well as policy and implementation rules to profit from new gTLDs.<ref>[http://www.afilias.info/blogs/roland-laplante/nxt-conference-inspires-and-informs-new-gtld-debate .nxt Conference Inspires and Informs New gTLD Debate]</ref>


The keynote speakers during the conference were [[Juan Diego Calle]], President of [[.co]] and [[Kurt Pritz]], Senior Vice President, [[ICANN]] Stakeholder Relations.
The keynote speakers during the conference were [[Juan Diego Calle]], President of [[.co]] and [[Kurt Pritz]], Senior Vice President, [[ICANN]] Stakeholder Relations.

Revision as of 18:45, 2 August 2011

Type: Privately held
Industry: Internet
Founded: 2011
Founder(s): Kieren McCarthy
Headquarters: 426B Cole St.

San Francisco, 94117

Country: USA
Website: dot-nxt.com
Facebook: Dot-Nxt
LinkedIn: .Nxt
Twitter: @dotnxtcon
Key People
Kieren McCarthy, CEO & General Manager
Amy Zelinsky, Conference Producer
Christine Hartman, Conference Specialist

.Nxt Conference is a newly formed conference based in San Francisco, established by Kieren McCarthy in 2011 to educate and provide relevant information regarding existing opportunities associated with Internet policy and governance. It also aims to strengthen the multi-stakeholder model of decision making.[1]

Services

  • Comprehensive Information Service about Internet policy and governance
  • Meetings and Conferences to bring together people in the Internet industry to discuss important Internet issues
  • Consultancy Arm to provides assistance to companies regarding Internet policy governance efforts

The First .nxt Conference

The first .nxt conference was focused on the business of new gTLDs and the future of the Internet. It was held in San Francisco on February 8-10, 2011 with 176 participants.[2]

The topics during the inaugural conference were about integrating with registrars, developing effective and winning marketing strategies, innovative business models, community outreach and the importance of choosing an expert and stable registrar as well well as policy and implementation rules to profit from new gTLDs.[3]

The keynote speakers during the conference were Juan Diego Calle, President of .co and Kurt Pritz, Senior Vice President, ICANN Stakeholder Relations.

Michael Berkens, CEO of Worldwide Media; John Berryhill, Attorney at John Berryhill LLC; Mason Cole, Vice President of Communications and Industry Relations at Oversee.net; Chris Disspain, CEO of auDA; Jothan Frakes, Owner Jothan.com; Cade Metz, US editor of The Register; Derek Newman, Attorney at law of Newman & Newman; and Kieren McCarthy served as Moderators for the Conference.

A second conference is scheduled for August 24-26, 2011 in San Francisco. Topics will be about the role of governments and ICANN on new gTLDs, issues surrounding brand names, Internationalized Domain Namess (IDNs),security/DNSSEC, Intellectual Property (IP) issues, dispute resolution policies and other important matters regarding registry/registrar operations on new gTLDs.[4]

References