Difference between revisions of ".education"

From ICANNWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 12: Line 12:
 
|category = [[:Category:Education New gTLDs|Education]]
 
|category = [[:Category:Education New gTLDs|Education]]
 
|community  =
 
|community  =
 +
|PIC = [https://gtldresult.icann.org/application-result/applicationstatus/applicationdetails/789 Download Here]
 
|priority = 1106 - [[Donuts]] (Brice Way, LLC)
 
|priority = 1106 - [[Donuts]] (Brice Way, LLC)
 
|keypeople  =
 
|keypeople  =

Revision as of 15:07, 13 March 2013

Status: Proposed
Registry Provider: Demand Media
Registry: Donuts
Registry Backend: Donuts
Type: Generic
Category: Education
PIC Submitted: Download Here
Priority #: 1106 - Donuts (Brice Way, LLC)
nTLDStats
Registrations: 30,338
Parked Domains: 14,102
Parked Domain %: 46.48 %
Important Dates
Delegation: 28 December 2013
General Availability: 02 April 2014

More Information: NTLDStatsLogo.png

.education is a proposed TLD in ICANN's New gTLD Program. The applicant is Donuts (Brice Way, LLC).[1]

European Commission Communiqué

The European Commission flagged the application for .education outside of ICANN's defined remediation processes.

Just after ICANN's GAC issued its Early Warnings, which are advice given from one GAC member country to an applicant warning it of potential issues within its application, the European Commission issued a letter to all applicants within the new gTLD program. The letter highlights 58 applications that "could raise issues of compatibility with the existing legislation .. and/or with policy positions and objectives of the European Union." It notes a desire to open a dialogue with each offending applicant.

The Commission specifically notes that this objection is not a part of the GAC Early Warning process, and goes on to note that "the Commission does not consider itself legally bound to [ICANN] processes," given that there is not legal agreement between the two bodies.[2][3]

Application Details

Many of Donuts' applications, including this one, seem to have been applied for using the same boiler-plate application in which the TLD is defined as a means of providing greater expression on the Internet and will be an open TLD without pre-registration policies. It notes its plans to adhere with all registration policies required by ICANN and its intent to have remediation and takedown policies clearly defined to fit within these requirements. Pre-registration verification will not be used and this as defined as causing "cause more harm than benefit by denying domain access to legitimate registrants." They intend to control abuse through "extensive user and rights protections."[4]

References