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| Q1. |
Why do we need a .ASIA Top Level Domain (TLD)? |
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.ASIA
TLD fulfils a market need and a dream: market needs in a dynamically
growing community, and a dream to have a unified front that improves
international recognition and regional competitiveness to balance the
global forces.
With over 60%
of the world's population (and over 90 languages), Asia is a region
that is experiencing tremendous economic, cultural and technical
growth. Asia has begun to emerge from its financial and economic
problems of the 1990s; at this critical juncture of rejuvenation, a
special, dedicated domain can help players in the region to realize
their global citizenship as well as the potential for regionally
targeted efforts.
Although
our cultures and languages are diverse, the Asia community has common
interest with the word "Asia" and has a very good sense of belonging of
being part of Asia. This is evidenced by the cooperative atmosphere and
successful operations of APNIC, APNG, APTLD, APRICOT and etc.
Leveraging
the successful experience of existing Asia community initiatives,
DotAsia Organisation aspires to bring together the Pan-Asia and
Asia-Pacific region. A regionally dedicated domain can help cement a
common regional identity that will be reinforced by the reinvestment of
registry proceeds into further development for the region. While a
single domain registry cannot solve all of the macro issues in the
region, this initiative nevertheless seeks to contribute to the
realization that regional collaboration will lead to stronger global
competitiveness among Pan-Asia and Asia-Pacific corporations, economies
and people.
The Internet is
playing an increasingly important role in the resurgent economies in
the Pan-Asia and Asia-Pacific region. As corporations and entities look
beyond their local markets, an online identity is key and a regional
domain is a logical next growth step. Similarly, when multi-nationals
establish presence in the region, they need a regional identity instead
of simply a local one. For example, if a company establishes an Asia
headquarters in Shanghai, a ..CN. address may be best for communicating
with prospective clients in China. However, when this company visits
Japan, a .ASIA address reinforces the broader scope of their market. A
regional address may also help local companies to overcome biases when
they expand outside their home market. A new domain will satisfy demand
for a .virtual central market. with a neutral regional identity
As
in most areas, the SME segment (small/medium enterprises) comprises the
largest and fastest growing segment of the market. We believe this is
precisely the segment that will benefit most from the market-expanding
potential of a regional .ASIA domain.
As
Prof. Kilnam Chon, a renowned Internet pioneer in Asia, points out,
just as there is a place for international magazines, regional
magazines and local magazines, there needs to be a place for
international TLDs, regional TLDs and local TLDs. From the point of
view of DNS operations, a .ASIA TLD provides specific services for a
specialized community that has unique needs not otherwise served by a
generic or a country code TLD.
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| Q2. |
Who would want a .ASIA TLD? Who are the target customers? |
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.ASIA
is a highly recognisable phrase that is short, easy to remember,
versatile but specific and focused on the Asia identity. It captures
the essence of the community served and is a sustainable phrase that
will not easily become obsolete. .Asia. traverses a broad region yet
elicits a clear concept and coherence of the community, providing
registrants tremendous value in establishing an Internet presence with
global recognition and regional significance. The name value for .ASIA
is especially remarkable for the thriving SME (small medium
enterprises) make-up of the Asia economies. This is amplified even more
as these SMEs continue to expand beyond their local market to the
regional marketplace leveraging the Internet as a platform for growth.
The
.ASIA domain can also be naturally used by individuals, businesses,
organisations as well as community groups, without constraining to a
particular silo within the community, promoting a diverse and dynamic
community within the .ASIA namespace. This matches well and is
consistent with the multicultural and vibrant community in Asia.
There
is a recognisable latent demand in Asia for a TLD with regional
significance and versatility. The .ASIA TLD will address this gap in
the domain namespace. Furthermore, many of the less technically
conscious SMEs in the region have .lost out. on the rush for a presence
in the now well-occupied namespaces. The .ASIA domain will provide an
opportunity for these entities to establish a representative yet
adaptable online identity. Not only will commercial entities benefit
from the opening of the .ASIA domain as a regional presence on the
Internet, individuals and public or private initiatives, such as
regional community organisations and events, will also be able to
establish their presence with an Internet address that is meaningful.
Altogether,
these elements will work to enhance both the geographic as well as the
demographic diversity of the Internet namespace.
.Asia.
is a term with broad significance and has a clear and lasting value.
Many companies, initiatives, events and organisations use .Asia. as a
defining element of the core values or sectional aspect in their names.
For example:
- Regional companies in Asia
- Local companies expanding to the Asia regional market
- Asia headquarters or subsidiaries of global companies
- NGOs and not-for-profit organisations in Asia such as APNIC, APTLD, APNG, PAN/IDRC etc.
- Asia based events, such as Asian Games, Asian Cup, ITU Telecom Asia, CommunicAsia and many others
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Asia version of global media or regional Asia media: Asian Wall Street
Journal, Asia Computer Weekly, Channel News Asia and many other
newspapers, magazines, TV channels which target the Asia market and
community
- Asia focused businesses: Air Asia, JetStar Asia, Aero Asia, etc.
Being
able to use a domain name such as .name.ASIA. is therefore going to add
a lot of value to the registrant as well as the general Internet user. |
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| Q3. |
Who are the initiators of .ASIA initiative? How did it get started? |
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The
beginnings of the .ASIA initiative can be attributed back to the
discussions started in 2000 around the interest to establish a regional
TLD ..AP. (http://www.wwtld.org/meetings/cctld/20001022.ccTLD-APTLD.html).
It was quickly identified that there are many regional organisations in
the Pan-Asia and Asia-Pacific region, yet unlike in Europe, there is no
pan-governmental organisation like the EU, and such is unlikely to be
formed in a meaningful horizon. Furthermore, the code .AP., although
not used at the moment, is a reserved code for .African Regional
Industrial Property Organization. based on ISO3166, and ICANN views 2-character TLDs to be reserved for ccTLDs.
Discussions
and interests of an Asia focused TLD registry continued intermittently
during informal discussions within the community. In fact, additional
attempts were put forward by different organisations and individuals,
including an initiative from Korea and another to repurpose the ..AS.
TLD as a regional domain. In late 2002 during the ITU Asia conference
in Hong Kong, informal discussions began to intensify as the conditions
ripen and were propelled by the coincidental discussions at ICANN for a
new round of Sponsored gTLDs. Throughout 2003, the concept began to
take shape as informal discussions continued during different regional
and international conferences. Among the active proponents were Che-Hoo
Cheng, who is a long time participant in the Internet community in Asia
and Edmon Chung, who is an enthusiastic pioneer of multilingual domain
names (IDN- Internationalized Domain Names). Che-Hoo has been working
especially hard as a volunteer to kick-start the initiative.
On 15 December 2003, ICANN announced a Request For Proposal (RFP) for Sponsored Top Level Domain Names (http://www.icann.org/announcements/announcement-15dec03.htm).
The initiative immediately accelerated and started to formalize. As
identified in the discussions, no particular existing organisation was
chartered to particularly suit in spearheading the initiative. Further,
as discussions gradually materialise from informal conversations into
the formation of a movement towards a response to the RFP from ICANN, a
structure for a new sponsoring organisation emerged that would be open
to many different organisations in the region to participate. This not
only ensured a broad participation but also a critical knowledge base
for managing a TLD registry with particular experience in managing
public resources that balances the interests of public authorities and
the community at large.
When
the proposal was submitted to ICANN on 16 March 2004, 7 ccTLDs (.CN,
.ID, .JP, .MO, .NU, .TW and .VN) as well as APNIC and APNG already
participated as members. Since then, recruitment of members continued,
and as of February 2005, there are already 20 participating ccTLDs
(including .KZ, .TJ & .UZ from Central Asia, .AF, .BT, .IN &
.IR from South Asia, .KH, .PH & .SG from South-East Asia, .KR &
.MN from East Asia and .NZ from Pacific) along with 3 regional
organisations: APNIC, APNG and PAN/IDRC.
The
formation of DotAsia is therefore truly a bottom-up community-based
initiative that was not created or mandated by any government or
particular existing organisation or constituency. Rather it was a
grassroots initiative that gradually gained the support from a broad
and diverse range of well-established organisations in the region (see http://www.dotasia.org/about/members.html for list of supporters).
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| Q4. |
What is the DotAsia Organisation Limited (DotAsia)? |
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DotAsia
Organisation Limited (DotAsia) was created for the focused purpose of
initiating and managing a Top Level Domain registry for the Asia
community. DotAsia, when formally established upon approval of ICANN on
.ASIA, will be a not-for-profit membership-based organisation
incorporated in Asia, registered as a Limited-by-Guarantee Company in
Hong Kong. DotAsia will be the Registry Operator and the Sponsoring
Organisation for the .ASIA Top Level Domain Registry.
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| Q5. |
What is the Vision & Mission of DotAsia? |
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The
vision of DotAsia is to create a globally visible domain that embodies
the successful, cooperative atmosphere established within the Pan-Asia
and Asia-Pacific Internet community to accelerate the overall growth of
the region.
The mission of DotAsia 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.
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To reinvest surpluses in socio-technological advancement initiatives
relevant to the Pan-Asia and Asia-Pacific Internet community; and
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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.
As
part of the mission, an important philosophy of DotAsia is to be able
to reinvest back into the social and technological advancement
initiatives within the community. Based on the revenue allocation
structure of DotAsia, a guaranteed portion of revenues will be directly
re-invested into the community through participating ccTLDs (as Sponsor
Members) (see Q14 below for more information). This ensures that DotAsia will immediately contribute to its sponsored community from its operations.
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| Q6. |
Why should .ASIA be a Sponsored Generic TLD (sTLD) instead of an Unsponsored Generic TLD (gTLD)? |
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Based on ICANN's definition (http://www.icann.org/registries/):
.Generally
speaking, an unsponsored gTLD Registry operates under policies
established by the global Internet community directly through the ICANN
process...
A
sponsored TLD is a specialized TLD that has a sponsor representing a
specific community that is served by the TLD. The sponsor thus carries
out delegated policy-formulation responsibilities over many matters
concerning the TLD....
An
important reason why .ASIA should be a Sponsored gTLD is that it will
retain certain policy formulation responsibilities specific to the
interests of the sponsored community. For example, the .ASIA registry
will have an expanded list of reserved domain names; explore the
feasibility and value of augmenting the UDRP with local DRP forums;
eligibility requirements; and other policies and practices that
minimize abusive registration activities and other activities that
affect the legal rights of others, especially in the community.
The boundaries of the .ASIA community are clearly defined based on the ICANN Asia / Australia / Pacific region (http://www.icann.org/montreal/geo-regions-topic.htm). Eligibility of domain registrations is restricted to legal entities within the boundary.
DotAsia
views .Asia. as a term that appropriately embodies the diverse and
vibrant Pan-Asia and Asia-Pacific community, and a TLD name-string that
is representative, short, recognisable and conceptually viable. DotAsia
believes that .Asia. as a term used for a TLD has broad significance,
clear and lasting value, and creates a new and differentiated space
that enhances the diversity of the Internet namespace.
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| Q7. |
Where did the seed money for DotAsia Organisation come from? |
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There
is no .seed money. in the entirety of the meaning. DotAsia Organization
is a not-for-profit initiative. Initial capital is obtained in the form
of a zero-interest unsecured loan from Afilias. DotAsia will begin
repaying this loan mid-way through the first year of operations, after
the launch of registrations and has started receiving income. The
repayment terms are favourable to DotAsia in that it is risk free and
on a per-domain-year basis. The loan is also not convertible to
.shares. or sharing of .retained earnings. of the organisation. This
greatly reduces the financial risk for DotAsia and is an important
element, among other technical and operational considerations for
choosing Afilias to be the back-end registry services provider (see Q27 for more information).
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| Q8. |
Who is paying for the expenses that DotAsia Organisation has so far including the US$45K application fee to ICANN? |
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DotAsia
is currently operated by volunteers and consultants. Out-of-pocket
expenses are paid for by DotAsia and endorsed by the Initial Board,
drawn from a loan as described above in Q7.
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| Q9. |
Does DotAsia have endorsement from governments? |
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DotAsia
is a community-based bottom-up initiative, with a membership-based
not-for-profit organisation structure. Therefore, it is realised that
it is inappropriate to solicit direct .endorsements. from governments
because it is a private sector initiative. The governance structure of
DotAsia Organisation represents a knowledgeable base, including
participation from ccTLDs and regional organisations, that is
experienced with the management of public resources (e.g. domain names,
IP address blocks, etc.) while balancing the interests of public
authorities and the community at large. For more discussion on the
governance structure, please refer to Q10 below.
Nevertheless,
and further to the indirect support through participation of ccTLDs,
the organisation believes in the importance of a channel of
communication with respective governments, because in fact, they form
an important part of the community as well. DotAsia has had continued
communications with a number of governments and inter-governmental
entities. We also have had informal information exchange meetings with
GAC members from the region during recent ICANN meetings and plan to
continue to have such gatherings during future meetings. An informal
information exchange mailing list has also been set up. If agreeable
and appropriate, a liaison may be established in the future to DotAsia
for continuous communications when DotAsia is officially formalized. So
far, our communications with them are proven useful and we have
received no objection.
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| Q10. |
What is the governance structure of DotAsia? |
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The governance structure of DotAsia will be constituted based on two types of membership organisations:
1. Sponsor Members (ccTLDs in the region)
2. Co-Sponsor Members (regional organisations)
(For more description of the 2 types of members, please refer to Q12 below.)
The
governance of DotAsia will be the responsibility of the Board of
Directors, which will be advised by an Advisory Council. To ensure that
the Board of Directors is relevant and representative of the
multicultural Pan-Asia and Asia-Pacific region, geographical diversity
will be an important criterion for the selection of the Directors. This
geographical diversity requirement will be enforced and at least one
individual from each of the 4 sub-regions will be represented on the
Board. Each member of the Board of Directors will be expected to act on
behalf of the organization as a whole and not as a representative of
the organisation from which s/he was nominated. An Advisory Council
will be created to advise the Board on all policy matters.
In
addition to the Board of Directors, a Proceeds Steering Committee
(PROSCOM) will be created by the Board to oversee the allocation of
surplus proceeds from registry operations. The PROSCOM will solicit,
evaluate and recommend (within the committee or through a third party
evaluator) grants to relevant social and/or technical initiatives and
activities from the surplus proceeds. The Board will ultimately
authorise the grants and decide the qualifications for and number of
members of the PROSCOM.
In summary, the main activities of DotAsia will be governed by three key groups:
. Board of Directors: made up of elected representatives from Sponsor (8) and Co-Sponsor (2) members plus the CEO;
. Advisory Council: made up of representatives of Co-Sponsor members; and
. Proceeds Steering Committee: created by the Board.
The
direct and close involvement of many regional ccTLDs ensures a wealth
of knowledge and expertise in the operational and policy management of
a TLD registry in the Pan-Asia and Asia-Pacific region. Furthermore,
representation in governance from successful Asia-Pacific Internet and
Information Technology groups provides broad representation and
relevance from the Pan-Asia and Asia-Pacific community. Together they
create a well-balanced governance structure that forms a solid
foundation for a successful TLD registry for Asia.
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| Q11. |
How can I participate in .ASIA initiative as an individual? |
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As
an individual, you are welcome to provide suggestions directly to the
initiative by emailing to comments@dotasia.org. Furthermore, you can
participate in .ASIA via our Sponsor Members (ccTLDs) or our Co-sponsor
Members (Regional Organisations). If your affiliated organisation has
not joined the .ASIA initiative as member but is interested to join,
please encourage your organisation to join us by connecting with us via
email: info@dotasia.org.
Moreover,
DotAsia Organisation intends to operate in an open and transparent
manner. DotAsia Organisation will maintain a public Web site to post
policies and news of relevance to the community. Annual General
Meetings will be open for observation by the public. DotAsia
Organisation intends to hold its Annual General Meetings in conjunction
with annual APRICOT conferences for the convenience of participants and
to further encourage the participation of interested observers. APRICOT
conferences are attended by many leaders and active participants from
the Internet community in the Pan-Asia and Asia-Pacific region.
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| Q12. |
Who are members of DotAsia Organisation? |
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There are 2 types of members defined:
1. Sponsor Members
Sponsor Members shall be organisations in the Pan-Asia and Asia-Pacific
region, as defined by ICANN's Asia / Australia / Pacific Region (based
on the ICANN Region definitions) that manage and operate any of the
country code Top Level Domain (ccTLD) registries in the region.
2. Co-Sponsor Members
Co-Sponsor Members shall be regional-based Internet, Information
Technology, Telecommunications, non-profit, NGO or other relevant
community organizations in the Pan-Asia and Asia-Pacific region.
Current
members of DotAsia come from a diverse geographical basis in the
Pan-Asia and Asia-Pacific community, demonstrating evidence of broad
support from the community. For an up-to-date list of members, please
refer to: http://www.dotasia.org/about/members.html.
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| Q13. |
What are the benefits of being a member of DotAsia? |
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Rather
than viewing the membership as benefit, members of DotAsia contribute
to the governance of the .ASIA Sponsored gTLD. Members of DotAsia
Organisation participate in the nomination and election of the Board,
which will oversee the governance of the .ASIA registry. Co-Sponsor
Members will also nominate a representative on to the Advisory Council.
Sponsor
Members will contribute by managing direct re-investment activities to
fuel socio-technical initiatives in the region. These funds will be
allocated directly from proceeds of the .ASIA registry on a
per-domain-year basis so that there would be benefits to the community
immediately. (See Q14 for more details.)
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| Q14. |
As ccTLD member of DotAsia, do I share the revenue of DotAsia? |
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As
a core part of the constitution of DotAsia to contribute financially to
the community served, a guaranteed portion of the revenue will be
directly re-invested into technical and social developmental activities
for the Internet community in the Pan-Asia and Asia-Pacific region.
This direct re-investment will be procured through participating ccTLDs
(Sponsor Members) on a per-domain-year amount basis. There will be
certain restrictions applied to this because DotAsia Organisation is a
not-for-profit organisation. The policy for this will be established by
Advisory Council in due course.
The Proceeds Steering Committee will manage allocations not directed through the Sponsor Members.
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| Q15. |
Who are the current members of DotAsia? |
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Members
of DotAsia come from a diverse geographical basis in the Pan-Asia and
Asia-Pacific community, demonstrating evidence of broad support from
the community. For an up-to-date list of members please refer to: http://www.dotasia.org/about/members.html.
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| Q16. |
Who are in the Initial Board and the Initial Advisory Council? |
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The
initial board and initial advisory council are constituted of
distinguished individuals from the community. Please refer to: http://www.dotasia.org/about/initialboard.html for the list and brief bios.
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| Q17. |
Will our organisation lose any benefits if we join later? |
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Members
value contributing to the governance of the .ASIA Sponsored gTLD
registry as a key benefit. All Sponsor Members or Co-Sponsor Members
enjoy the same benefits and are treated equally no matter when they
join. This is consistent with the inclusive approach of DotAsia, so
that organisations may join the initiative at its own pace.
Moreover,
DotAsia will also be committing to continual outreach to recruit
additional members from the region. In fact, as described in our
proposal to ICANN, a portion of the budget of the organisation is
dedicated to this activity. The outreach efforts will further the
community mandate of the organisation as well as to help bring the less
active local constituencies into the regional and international
Internet community and forums such as ICANN, ccNSO and APTLD.
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| Q18. |
Why should our organisation join .ASIA initiative? |
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There are many reasons that your organisation should join DotAsia as members, including but not limiting to:
- Participate in the governance of an exciting initiative and the first global TLD in Asia for Asia
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DotAsia is a not-for-profit organisation that is owned by the community
and will contribute its proceeds directly back to the community
- Contribute to the development and adoption of Internet in Asia at large
- Bring more diverse views and perspectives of the diverse Asia community to the development and management of the .ASIA registry
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| Q19. |
What should we do if we want to join .ASIA initiative? |
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If your affiliated organisation would like to join .ASIA initiative, please contact info@dotasia.org. |
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| Q20. |
When will .ASIA TLD be available? |
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It
is planned that .ASIA TLD will be launched within 6-9 months after the
agreement between ICANN and DotAsia is signed. The initial launch will
be phased to take into consideration intellectual property
considerations as well as the best interests of the rights of others in
the community. The first stage will be the Sunrise Period for trademark
owners. .ASIA TLD will then be generally available to eligible
customers after the Sunrise Period. Details of the arrangements will be
announced as they become confirmed. Please stay tuned. |
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| Q22. |
Where can I register names under .ASIA TLD when it is available? |
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You
can register names under .ASIA TLD through our accredited registrars
and participating ccTLDs (see
http://www.icann.org/registrars/accredited-list.html) or their
resellers. |
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| Q23. |
What are the special features and differentiators of .ASIA TLD? |
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The
.ASIA Sponsored gTLD will allow companies, organisations, events and
individuals within the Asia community to establish their online
identity in a regional context. While current gTLDs tend to focus on a
vertical group (e.g. commercial entities, network providers,
organisations, museums, cooperatives, etc.) within the global Internet,
.ASIA will embrace a horizontal perspective with a clear brand to reach
and enrich the broad global community. Unlike ccTLDs also, which
provides for a local audience, .ASIA will allow the user to express a
regional relevance.
For
Dispute Resolution Policy (DRP), we will adopt the Universal Dispute
Resolution Policy (UDRP) as our default DRP. However, we will also
explore the feasibility and value to apply local dispute resolution
policy developed by participating ccTLDs (our Sponsor Members) wherever
possible, for example for cases where both the complainant and the
respondent come from the same economy. This may be particularly useful
for IDN cases. We will conduct an extensive study on this matter after
we obtain the approval of ICANN.
Also,
DotAsia will have Charter Eligibility Dispute Resolution Policy (CEDRP)
which can help to restrict non-compliant domain registrations. DotAsia
will have extensive reserved name arrangements with ccTLDs so that
certain level of geographical names and politically sensitive names can
be protected. Last but not least, DotAsia will do joint marketing and
product bundling with participating ccTLDs (Sponsor Members). |
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| Q24. |
Will .ASIA offer IDN services? |
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Yes.
.ASIA will launch ASCII domain name services first. Afterwards, we will
launch IDN services step by step, language by language, strictly
following the IDN standards of IETF and IDN guidelines issued by ICANN.
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| Q25. |
What are the roles of Afilias in DotAsia? |
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Afilias
will be the back-end registry services and technology provider for the
.ASIA TLD. Afilias will also be a creditor of DotAsia Organisation,
providing loans (please see Q7, Q8 and Q26
for more information on the loan) for the initial start-up of the
registry. Other than these two roles, Afilias does not have much role
to play for DotAsia. Afilias is not and will not be our investor,
shareholder, or member. DotAsia will be working independently of
Afilias and neither organisation may act on behalf of or in the
capacity of the other. |
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| Q26. |
Has Afilias provided any donation or subsidy to DotAsia? |
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No.
We have not accepted and do not intend to accept or receive any
donation or subsidy from Afilias. DotAsia organisation intends to
maintain complete autonomy with its governance formed from our
community. The expenses incurred to date by DotAsia, including the
US$45K sTLD application fee to ICANN and other expenses for DotAsia,
such as travelling expenses, are drawn from a loan to DotAsia obtained
from Afilias (see Q7). The loan is a zero-interest
unsecured loan to DotAsia and with repayment terms based on a
per-domain-year schedule, after DotAsia opens its registration
operations. The structure of the loan, affords the organisation and our
members virtually no financial burden on the start-up of the registry. |
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| Q27. |
Why was Afilias chosen as the back-end registry services provider? |
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Some of the reasons why Afilias was chosen as the back-end registry services provider of DotAsia include:
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Afilias is the world's second largest gTLD registry company, and the
leading registry services provider. They currently operate .INFO, .ORG,
.IN and 8 other ccTLDs, with a total of over 7 million domains under
management, representing over 10% of the world's total number of
domains. Afilias was evaluated to be a proven provider with good
experience operating TLDs for themselves and for others. Having Afilias
as a technology provider provides high level of confidence for DotAsia
to meet ICANN's technical requirements. This is now proven to be an
accurate assessment.
- Afilias
has a proven track-record for maintaining good relationship with ICANN
and ongoing compliance with ICANN policies. The knowledge and
experience from Afilias for dealing with ICANN will be valuable to
DotAsia.
- The financial
terms for the ongoing registry services as well as the loan for
start-up activities of DotAsia Organisation proposed by Afilias is
highly favourable and risk free, based entirely on a per-domain-year
structure. There would be no one-time set-up cost to DotAsia so the
organisation would have very little financial burden on the capital
expenses part during the start-up period. In other words, it would be a
risk sharing model which would encourage both parties to do a better
job.
- Unlike other
providers, Afilias is focused solely on domain registry services and
will not be distracted by other priorities in other lines of businesses.
-
There are many Asians working for Afilias, especially on the .ASIA
project, including their CTO Ram Mohan who is from India. This will be
useful when .ASIA starts to offer IDN services.
DotAsia
Organisation does not believe that it would have been able to obtain a
materially better deal from any other existing providers, considering
the per-domain-year fee level as well as the zero-interest unsecured
loan, or have the capacity as a start-up not-for-profit organisation to
assume all technical responsibilities in a manner acceptable by ICANN
requirements. DotAsia Organisation believes that the decision was made
with fiscal prudence and was a correct decision. The arrangements and
rationales for the selection of Afilias as the registry services
provider are also well understood by our members. |
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| Q28. |
Will Afilias have any control over the policy formulation for the .ASIA TLD? |
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No.
DotAsia Organisation will have its own bottom-up policy formulation
process led by our Board and our Advisory Council, based on inputs from
our members and our community. Policies developed by Advisory Council
have to be endorsed by our Board before they are put forward to
implementation. Afilias is not and will not have any control over the
process other than providing technical advices in the capacity of a
registry services provider when being asked. |
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