The board of
US-based I
ponsibilities for registrars
that essentially act as domain name wholesalers.
ponsibilities for registrars
that essentially act as domain name wholesalers.
Changes
to contractually enforceable rules include requiring registrars to
confirm phone numbers or addresses of those buying domain names within
15 days.
"People who have stolen an identity
or have criminal backgrounds obviously don't want to give you their name
and address if their intentions are not kosher," said Cyrus Namazi,
Icann's vice president of industry engagement.
"The intent here is to weed out bad actors."
Prior
to new rules outlined in the Registrar Accreditation Agreement, there
were "loose checks and balances" to make sure aliases weren't being used
by people buying domain names, according to Namazi.
"It is a very serious and significant milestone in moving toward new gTLDs (generic Top-Level domains)," he said.
Icann
is considering more than 1,800 requests for new web address endings,
ranging the general such as ".shop" to the highly
specialized".motorcycles."
Many of the
requests are large companies such as Apple, Mitsubishi and IBM. Internet
giant Google has alone applied for more than 100 web addresses,
including .google, .YouTube, and .lol internet slang for laugh out
loud.
California-based Icann says the huge
expansion of the internet, with some two billion users around the world,
half of them in Asia, means new names are essential.
There are currently just 22 gTLDs, of which .com and .net comprise the lion's share of online addresses.
"We
spent a long time negotiating very thorny issues," Akram Atallah,
Icann's generic domains division head, said in an online video.
"The new agreement achieves everything we wished for in order to roll out the new gTLD programme."
The first new website address endings should be available in the final quarter of this year, according to Namazi.
The revamped agreement will affect more than 1,000 domain name registrars around the world.
Icann
has been negotiating with domain handlers for more than two years on
agreement revisions, with interests of governments and law enforcement
agencies among those factored into changes, according to Namazi.
"Law enforcement agencies played a big role in it, because internet crime is one of the biggest factors out there," he said.
"Governments
are actively involved because the internet is one thing that
connectsthe governments of the world and some want to control it."
The
agreement doesn't require domain operators to go beyond legal limits
regarding information that must be supplied to law enforcement
officials, according to Icann.
"This agreement
is probably going to be somewhat invisible to consumers but it provides
a mechanism to protect privacy and prevent crime," Namazi said.
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