New TLD contracting
The following is an outline of the Contracting process as defined by ICANN, it is our goal to supplement this with actual contracting timelines and action items that are encountered by new TLD applicants. Information can be edited directly, or contact Andrew Merriam, andrew[at]tldesign.co
Steps & Timeline[edit | edit source]
- CIR (aprox. 8 days)
- CIR Review
- Sign Registry Agreement
- PDT (approx. 6 weeks)
- Transition to Delegation (approx. 2 weeks)
- Delegation
- Registry Onboarding
Contracting Information Request[edit | edit source]
- See Contracting Information Request summary and example.
- ICANN suggested timeline: 8 days
- Applicant timeline examples: _ days
Registry Agreement[edit | edit source]
- See Summary and Examples on Signing Registry Agreement
- ICANN suggested timeline: 7 days
- Applicant timeline examples:
Pre-Delegation Testing[edit | edit source]
The Pre-Delegation Testing (PDT) process allows ICANN to determine if registries meet specific “technical and operational requirements”[1] deemed necessary to maintain a new gTLD.
Post-Delegation Processes[edit | edit source]
Sunrise Period[edit | edit source]
The Sunrise Period gives trademark holders a minimum of 30 days to register domain names that match their trademarks before these names become publicly accessible.[2] Additionally, notice must be given to all trademark holders in the clearinghouse when new gTLDs enter this process. [3]
Trademark Clearinghouse[edit | edit source]
Registries are required to submit new gTLDs to the Trademark Clearinghouse (TMC or TMCH), which was established in order to protect intellectual and trademarked property. Attempts to register a mark that is already within the system will lead to notification.[2]
Registry Onboarding[edit | edit source]
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ Milestone: First of the Contracted Registries Pass Pre-Delegation Testing
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 FAQs: Trademark Clearinghouse
- ↑ gTLD Applicant Guidebook, pdf version 2012-06-04, p. 296