.vote
Status: | Contract Signed |
country: | International |
Type: | Generic |
Category: | Lifestyle |
More information: |
.vote is a proposed gTLD in ICANN's new gTLD program. Monolith Registry LLC is the only active applicant.[1] Donuts had also applied for the string but withdrew in June 2013, in what seems to be the first withdrawal related to a private gTLD auction, which was facilitated by Innovative Auctions. The amount of the winning bid was not disclosed. The proposed application succeeded and was delegated to the Root Zone on 2 March 2014.[2]
The remaining applicant, Monolith Regsitry LLC is a joint venture between Afilias and two Utah-based investors. It is their intent to restrict registration to only verified "governments and office-seekers" within the USA. They suggest to expand eligibility to other countries in the future. The registration price is expected to be $60. The applicant also is the only applicant for .voto, which it expects to charge $100 per registration.[3]
Mission and Purpose[edit | edit source]
Currently there is a confused profusion of Internet sites related to elections, referenda, and public and private governance questions involving a vote. Internet users often have to engage in long and often unproductive searches in order to find all the information they are seeking regarding any given vote in which they are interested.
Monolith Registry, LLC envisions the .VOTE TLD to be an easily identifiable Internet space where users seeking information on any given election or question that is put to a vote can easily find information regarding issues, candidates and options. .VOTE will be not be open to the general public, but rather is intended for political candidates, political action committees (PACs), political committees, and other verifiable registrants.
Due to the complexity of accommodating election laws around the world, initially .VOTE will be rolled out only in the U. S. The 85,006 governments in the United States had 513,200 elected officials in 1992, the latest year for which this data is available (http:⁄⁄www.census.gov⁄prod⁄2⁄gov⁄gc⁄gc92_1_2.pdf). By 2002, the governmental units in the United States had grown to 87,576 (http:⁄⁄www.census.gov⁄prod⁄2003pubs⁄gc021x1.pdf), and can be expected to have continued to grow to over 90,000 governmental units with nearly 550,000 elected officials today. Moreover, most elected positions have two or more candidates contesting for the position, pushing the total candidates for all elective offices to well over 1 million. Eventually, as other countries around the world begin to participate, this number is expected to grow exponentially
The .VOTE TLD seeks to make available to each of these candidates a domain by which they can inform the electorate about the issues in question and make their case that they are the candidate of choice for that position. Similarly, governmental organizations on all levels can create domains that cover all the relevant information for elections, referenda, and other matters of decision in their jurisdictions.
This will have the effect of creating an easily recognizable Internet space where end users can go to readily find the information they seek regarding elections and other matters of choice at all levels of government, thereby greatly reducing the current confusion of domains and difficulty of finding desired information.
Building awareness and knowledge of the TLD and the options it affords governments, candidates, and information seekers can be expected to take a couple of major election cycles. Driven by that dynamic, we expect that we will have 20,000 domains under management (DUMs) after three years.[4]
Contract Signed[edit | edit source]
On November 21, 2013 Monolith Registry LLC received a Registry Agreement signed by ICANN for .vote after passing the Initial Evaluation.[5]
Delegation and Availability[edit | edit source]
.vote was delegated to the Root Zone of the DNS on 2 March, 2014, completing the successful application for the string.[2]
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ Vote Status, ICANN.org
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Delegated Strings, ICANN.org Retrieved 5 March 2014
- ↑ Donuts Withdrawns Its Vote bid Raising Questions about New gTLD Auctions, DomainIncite.com Published and Retrieved 6 June 2013
- ↑ [1] Retrieved 03/6/2015
- ↑ Registry Agreements, ICANN.org Retrieved 02 Dec 2013