Dot Gay Alliance is a company dedicated for the benefit of the Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) community. It is one of the companies applying with ICANN to become the registry operator of the proposed .gay generic top level domain name (gTLD). Dot Gay Alliance is founded by Joe Dolce who also serves as Executive Director of the company. If approved by ICANN, Dot Gay Alliance plans to donate 51% of its revenues generated from selling .gay domain names to LGBT civil rights organizations worldwide. The company selected Minds + Machines to provide back-end registry services for the .gay string.[1] [2]

Type: Privately held
Industry: Registry
Founded: 2009
Founder(s): Joe Dolce
Headquarters: New York
Country: USA
Email: jd[at]dotgayalliance.com
Website: www.dotgayalliance.com
Facebook: Dot-Gay-Alliance
Twitter: Gay Alliance @Dot Gay Alliance
Key People
Joe Dolce, Founder & Executive Director
Paula Ettelbrick, Philanthropic Advisor

Mission

Dot Gay Alliance aims to raise money by operating the .gay gTLD to fight for the rights of the members of the LGBT community worldwide. [3]

Endorsements

Do Gay Alliance initiative to operate the .gay gTLD is endorsed by the following prominent individuals:[4]

  • New York City Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn
  • Daniel O'Donnell, Member of New York State Assembly
  • Edmund White, Award-winning author and professor of Creative Writing, Princeton University
  • Paula Ettelbrick, Civil rights lawyer, advocate, and non-profit executive
  • Michelle Kristel, Executive Director of In The Life Media
  • Sunil Babu Pant, the first openly gay member of the Nepal Parliament

Competitor

Dot Gay Alliance is competing with Dot Gay LLC to gain the approval from ICANN to operate the .gay domain name string. Dolce commented on one of the leaders of Dot Gay LLC particularly Alexander Shubert who is not gay. Dolce said, "If you’re launching a purely for-profit venture called dotGay and you are heterosexual, then you are in a way continuing a legacy of straight people earning a lot of money off of gay people that has gone on.I want to create a community which is run by the community and gives money back to the community." [5]

References