
You may have heard that ICANN (the group that manages naming conventions on the Internet) recently announced that domain names will now be allowed in non-Latin languages. This may not seem like a big issue from the US perspective, as we are all used to domain names in our native language, but this will have a significant positive impact to people in Asia, Russia and the Middle East. People in these regions and countries will soon be able to locate websites in their local language (languages under consideration include: Arabic, Persian, Chinese (simplified and traditional), Russian, Hindi, Greek, Korean, Yiddish, Japanese, Tamil, Hebrew and Amharic). More information on the announcement is at: ICANN
Probably not, unless the company plans (in the foreseeable future) to have a web site in a non-Latin language.
There are so many new domain name extensions, that I am numb from all those email alerts about new domain name extensions. However, while this one seems to fit into that category, for a small group of companies (that plan to roll out non-Latin language websites) this may be something they should pay attention to.
No related posts.
© 2009-12 Jeremy Aber. All Rights Reserved. Represents clients in Austin, Houston, Dallas, San Antonio and nationwide on copyright law.
SAAS Contract
SAAS Reseller Agreement
Austin Software Attorney
Houston Software Attorney
Dallas Software Attorney
Austin Copyright Attorney
Software Negotiations
SaaS Attorney
SaaS Agreement
Developed by Wordpress Experts