The DotAsia Organisation

Type: Non-Profit
Industry: Registry Operator
Founded: 2006
Headquarters: Hong Kong
Country: China
Employees: 11-50
Website: DotAsia.org
Key People
Edmon Chung, CEO

Ping Wong, Senior Business Development Manager
Ching Chiao, Vice President Community Relations
Leona Chen-Birkner

The DotAsia Organisation is the sponsor and registry operator for the .asia sTLD; which is the first TLD to be headquartered in Asia.[1]

Mission[edit | edit source]

The self-described mission of the DotAsia Organisation is:

  • To sponsor, establish and operate a regional Internet namespace with global recognition and regional significance, dedicated to the needs of the Pan-Asia and Asia Pacific Internet community;
  • To contribute proceeds in socio-technological advancement initiatives relevant to the Pan-Asia and Asia Pacific Internet community and;
  • To operate a viable not-for-profit initiative that is a technically advanced, world-class TLD registry for the Pan-Asia and Asia Pacific community.[2]

Structure[edit | edit source]

The Board of Directors is made up of 11 individuals; 8 seats are given to sponsor members- which come from the community of Asian ccTLD operators, 2 seats go to co-sponsor members -which are representatives of other organizations involved in Asian internet affairs, and 1 seat is for the board-appointed CEO.[3]

It is open to membership to all interested and applicable parties.

Start-Up[edit | edit source]

The Organisation was created in 2006 through a Sponsored TLD Registry Agreement.[4]

The Sunrise, Landrush, and Pioneer Domains Program went historically smooth for .asia. It conceived of the Pioneer Domains Program as an alternative to the general first-come-first-serve policy usually put in place through the Sunrise and Landrush periods. Its departure from this model marks the first time an application for a domain name was approved on the quality of the application itself.[5] Vint Cerf was quoted as saying : "The Pioneer Domains Program will be a useful benchmark for other new TLD operators to take into account".[6]

The Sunrise period began in October, 2007. The Landrush lasted from February to March, 2008. The Organisation claims that there were zero disputes received throughout the entire start-up process.[7] However, Thomas Rucker may take issue with that claim as he runs a website highlighting the discrepancies and "shady" dealing he sees within The DotAsia Organisation.

Development[edit | edit source]

In April, 2011 the Organisation announced that they were preparing to launch IDNs in the scripts of the Chinese (traditional & simplified), Japanese and Korean languages for the .asia domain. They tout this as the expansion of the asian Internet and the natural inclination to navigate the Internet in one's own language, whatever that may be. Edmon Chung, the CEO of the DotAsia Organisation, is a recognized expert and supporter of IDNs, and has been integral to the deployment of IDNs on his and on other domains.[8]

Security[edit | edit source]

In November, 2010, The DotAsia Organisation entered into an agreement with Afilias concerning DNSSEC implementation. The Organisation hailed it as a sign of its dedication to security issues and its status as an industry pioneer, given that at that time it is one of a few TLDs to have implemented DNSSEC.[9]

Relief.Asia[edit | edit source]

Following the Myanmar Cyclone and Sichuan Earthquakes, the DotAsia Organisation, along with other Asian IT leaders like ISOC HK, APNG, APNIC and others, created the Relief.Asia initiative. Their goal was to create a platform that could unite the Asian community in responding to disasters through IT solutions. Components of the initiative include: the deployment of wireless networks to areas that lose their fixed infrastructure, called DUMBO; The Sahana FOSS Management system that provides management applications designed to help with compiling missing persons registry, relief organization registries, and related programs; they also have a social networking platform that connects blogs with a wiki to provide for direct international communication regarding a given disaster.[10]

They have recently been involved in the New Zealand earthquakes and Japanese tsunami of 2010.

References[edit | edit source]