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New gTLD Objection

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Revision as of 20:03, 13 December 2013 by Jonah (talk | contribs)

The New gTLD Objection and Dispute Resolution process was laid out in the Applicant Guidebook of the New gTLD Program. The process gives business, applicants, organizations, and individuals a way to give objection arguments as to why a certain TLD should not be delegated. These formal objections will be arbitrated by an assigned organization, called a Dispute Resolution Service Provider (DRSP). A panelist from the DRSP hears written arguments from the objector and the applicant, and determines if the application prevails or the objector prevails.

Filing a formal objection costs between $5,000-$13,000 per party depending on the DRSP. Some of the fees are born solely on the objector and are non-refundable. Other fees are paid by both the objector and the applicant, and are reimbursed to the party that prevails in the case.

Types of Formal Objections[edit | edit source]

  • String Confusion Objections

Main article: String Confusion Objection

Objector argues that Internet users will be confused between the applied-for string and an existing TLD, because the strings appear to be similar or share letters or meaning.

  • Legal Right Objections

The objector argues that an applied-for string violates the legal rights of the objector.

  • Limited Public Interest Objections

The objector argues that the applied-for string goes against accepted legal or moral norms recognized under international law.

  • Community Objections

Main article: Community Objection

Objector argues that a substantial portion of the community that the applied-for string targets is against the delegation of that string.[1]


There are three organizations that were selected to determine objections.


[1]

References[edit | edit source]

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