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TelNic

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Revision as of 21:43, 20 January 2011 by Andrew (talk | contribs) (no spaces in between period at end of sentence and the ref tag.)
Type: Private
Industry: Registrar
Founded: UK (2000)
Headquarters: 37 Percy Street,
London W1T 2DJ
USA
Employees: 12 (2009)
Website: http://www.telnic.org
Key People
Khashayar Mahdavi, Chief Executive Officer

Henri Asseily, Chief Strategist & CTO
Justin Hayward, Communications Director
Ian Bowen-Morris, Director of Marketing
Lawrence Conroy, Technical Guru
Vladimir Shadrunov, Director of Policy
Adrian Snell, Director of Registrars
Nadya Morozova, Director of Community
Gareth Jehu, Director of Operations
Huw Stead, Engineering Director
Fiona McKeown, CFO

TelNic is a Registry Operator and Sponsoring Organization for the new .tel sponsored top level domain (sTLD) based in the UK.[1]. It was founded in 2000, launched .tel to the general public on March 24th, 2009 and has since registered over 275,000 .tel names.[2]. Some Industry experts predicted a huge number of purchases of .tel domains by the year 2013.[3]

TelNic provides service that allows embedding contact information in an Internet address book known as a DNS server (domain name server). Thus companies and individuals can create a virtual vCard or contact directory that enables users to easily and instantly "click to connect" via their preferred device. [4]. It doesn’t host web sites but links the domain names directly with contact information stored in the system. [5].

Telnic’s backend registry services are provided by NeuStar.[6].

History[edit | edit source]

  • In 2000, Telnic is founded and collaborates with strategic partners and service providers to develop a proof-of-concept.
  • It applies for the .tel in the first round of TLD applications, which is not successful. On October, 2000. However, ICANN encourages Telnic to re-submit in the following round after building a proof of concept. Telnic finally re-submits its modified application to ICANN for the .tel sTLD March 2004. On May 2006, Telnic’s application is successful and ICANN signs a formal agreement authorizing Telnic to operate the .tel sTLD.
  • In 2006, development begins on open source mobile and desktop client applications. Key agreements with strategic partner NeuStar and Sunrise Validation Agent Deloitte are signed in 2007. Telnic campaigns for better protection of privacy for individuals in WHOIS in the same year.
  • On 22nd June 2008, the Sunrise period is announced for 3rd December 2008 to the industry at ICANN Paris. Sunrise period opens in December 2008 and Landrush period opens in February 2009.
  • On March 2009, the first .tel domains go live. General Availability opens on March 24th 2009
  • On September, 2009, TelAds advertising platform launched by Telnic Limited to store and display sponsored weblinks, sponsored telephone numbers and related content on their .tel domains to both monetize and enhance the discovery of them through search engines. Telnic announces backup and restore for .tel domains using new functionality built in to the web control panel On October, 2009. [7].
  • As of January 2010, 300,000 .tel domains registered. Since June 2010, All .tel names support OpenID.

Products and Services[edit | edit source]

.tel names are not used as traditional websites and do not require traditional web development work. Rather, they are designed to consolidate contact information under one simple name such as "YourName.tel"

Features:

  • integration of multiple means of communication (i.e. Phone numbers, IM, VOIP, email, social media), location records and keywords
  • real-time publishing of contact information on the internet
  • ownership and protection of published data

Approval of .tel Domain by ICANN[edit | edit source]

TelNic gets a ten-year contract with ICANN and the fee paid by Telnic to ICANN will be measured by the number of .tel registrations and on the wholesale registration price. [8]

According to Justin Hayward, Telnic's communications director, by that time the startup has spent about $15 million on the years of engineering needed to perfect the technology. [9] He also commented that "It is a bit like an interactive business card on the Web that you can change and give to anyone so they can reach you.". The service was set to go live on December, 2008.

TelNic to go 'Live'[edit | edit source]

After being approved by ICANN, TelNic launched the new .tel platform that will not require a Web site and is optimized for mobile delivery with even less code than a small-screen-formatted site on December,3, 2008. [10]. This Sunrise Period was announced by TelNic in the ICANN meeting in Paris on June, 2008. [11]. During this period domains were be available only to trademark owners. [12]. The term planned was to benifit protection of trademarks and corporate identity.[13].

From Febraury 3,2009, began the Land Rush period where anyone could buy a .tel domain for individual or professional use. It was organized on first come first serve basis.[14]

Finally on March 2009, the first .tel domains go live in the DNS. [15]. On this occassion, Henri Asseily, CTO and Chief Strategist at Telnic said "We're delighted to be delivering something that will push the boundaries of communications and the internet to the next level, putting the power back into the hands of the individual when it comes to using and sharing contact information."

The company commented about selling 10 thousand domains during the rush period.[16]. General Availability has opened from March 24th 2009.

As examples of live sites, Telnic has built live case studies i.e. LargeCo.tel demonstrates how a large company can use the .tel. SmallCo.tel demonstrates how a small company can use the .tel. Hotels.tel demonstrates how a business could sell placement within a worldwide directory. Celebrity.tel demonstrates how a fan club could use the .tel to drive traffic to both web-based and mobile revenue centers. My-Idol.tel demonstrates how a company using a voting mechanism (like American Idol or Star Academy) could use the .tel. etc. [17]

References[edit | edit source]


External links[edit | edit source]