Third Amazon gTLD launch dates revealed
Amazon is set to launch not two but at least three of its dormant new gTLDs in the next few months, according to ICANN documentation.
As reported earlier this week, .talk and .fast are set to go to sunrise in August and general availability in September, and now they’ll be joined by a third: .you.
.you will enter a one-month sunrise period for trademark owners August 25, to be immediately followed by GA. There’ll likely also be a five-day Early Access Period.
The releases follow the launch of .free, .hot and .spot last month.
.TOP promises to play nice on DNS abuse
.TOP Registry is off the ICANN naughty step, almost a year after it became the first registry to be hit by a public contract-breach notice over ICANN’s latest rules on DNS abuse.
The Org took the highly unusual step yesterday of publishing a blog post drawing attention to what it clearly sees as a big Compliance win, ahead of its public meeting in Prague later this month, at which abuse will no doubt, as usual, be a key discussion topic.
ICANN said that it has been working with .TOP for months to put in systems aimed at reducing the abuse of .top domains. It posted:
.TOP Registry expressed its commitment to maintaining compliance with the DNS Abuse obligations and continuously strengthening its abuse detection and mitigation processes through newly established collaboration channels and a structured approach designed to drive ongoing enhancement. ICANN Compliance acknowledged that the remedial measures were sufficient to cure the Notice of Breach. We noted that future violations of these requirements will result in expedited compliance action, up to and including the issuance of additional Notices of Breach.
Compliance had hit .TOP with the breach notice last year over allegations that it repeatedly ignored abuse reports submitted by security researchers, and that it was ignoring Uniform Rapid Suspension notices.
Security outfit URLAbuse later revealed it was the party that had reported .TOP to ICANN.
.TOP is a Chinese registry that sells mainly via Chinese registrars, typically at under a couple bucks retail. A non-scientific perusal of its zone files reveals that the majority of the many thousands of domains it sells every day are nothing but disposable junk — random strings of characters with no meaning in any language.
While .top is far from alone in that regard, it is the most successful at the abuse-attractive low-price-high-volume business model. Its zone grew by almost 1.2 million domains in the last 12 months — the biggest growth spurt of any TLD — and it has just shy of four million domains today.
Despite this implausibly rapid growth, ICANN says that abuse reports for .top domains started falling in April and there has been a “noticeable decrease in reported abuse”.
The Org says it will “actively monitor the effectiveness of these new [.TOP] systems and processes, the Registry Operator’s abuse rankings and their compliance with the requirements.”
The registry has told ICANN it has already “mitigated” over 100,000 abusive domain names with its new systems and processes.
Court denies ICANN’s #MeToo “cover up” attempt
A Los Angeles court has ruled against ICANN’s attempt to have a former employee’s sexual harassment lawsuit against it thrown out, which the plaintiff claims was an attempt to “silence” her.
Tanzanica King, one of ICANN’s longest-serving employees, sued ICANN last August, claiming that had been repeatedly sexually harassed by her superior and others, as well as being paid less than male counterparts and passed over for promotions.
She was ultimately let go in ICANN’s round of layoffs last year. King, who has given her consent to be named in this reporting, claims that she was fired for becoming a whistleblower.
ICANN’s response to the suit was to point out that King’s employment contract, signed in 2002, requires her to take all disagreements to arbitration, rather than the courts, so the case should be dismissed.
But a US Federal law signed onto the statute books in 2023 in the wake of the #MeToo movement — the Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act (EFAA) — says that employees cannot be forced into arbitration.
ICANN argued, according to the court’s ruling (pdf) that the EFAA did not apply and local California state arbitration law should apply instead, but the judge disagreed.
The Superior Court in LA last week ruled, following precedent from Casey v. Superior Court last year:
The EFAA prohibits enforcing arbitration agreements against persons who allege sexual harassment… The EFAA applies to any dispute arising or accruing on or after the enactment of the act, May 2022
King’s lawyer, Jonathan Delshad, said in a statement:
ICANN tried to silence Ms. King and suppress the truth behind the secret walls of arbitration. This ruling affirms her right to tell her story in a public forum so that all can see what ICANN did to her. The Court’s decision makes clear that companies cannot use California law to escape accountability for sexual harassment and retaliation and make an end around the EFAA.
A trial date in July 2027 (not a typo) has been set.
Launch dates for two more Amazon gTLDs revealed
Fresh from the launch of .free, .hot and .spot, Amazon has pencilled in launch dates for two more of its backlog of dormant gTLDs.
The company has told ICANN it plans to launch .talk and .fast later this year, with sunrise coming in August.
It also seems to be planning to start using .audible, one of its dot-brands, but that would not be available for public registration.
.fast and .talk are set to enter their sunrise periods from August 26 to September 25 this year, according to ICANN documentation. General availability would follow immediately.
If Amazon follows the same playbook as it did with the three gTLDs it launched last month, there would also be a five-day Early Access Period, with premium prices for early adopters.
The May launches have yet to set the world alight, perhaps in part due to their pricing (ranging from $30 to $60 retail), with best-performer .free’s zone file containing just 1,150 domains so far.
An end to “Club Med for geeks” ICANN?
ICANN has dragged its community to 60 cities around the world over the 26 years and 75 in-person meetings since its foundation, but that degree of globe-trotting could soon come to an end.
A recently closed public comment period saw mixed responses to ICANN’s plan to reform its meetings strategy, but there was little dissent on one proposal; the community seems to be cool with ICANN narrowing the diversity of its venues.
The community was asked whether ICANN should prioritize affordability when it picks its host cities, even if that means it has to sign up to discounted long-term commitments on venues and hotels and return to the same locations over and over again.
They all said “Yes”. There was no division along the usual party lines.
ICANN is obligated by its bylaws to rotate its meetings around five geographic regions, but there’s no requirement to visit a diversity of nations. Hub cities such as Los Angeles, Singapore and Buenos Aires have played host multiple times.
Many commenters said that ICANN should stick to its geographic rotation commitments even if it means visiting fewer locations. Tucows suggested that one meeting per year should be in a “unique” location.
Perhaps the most on-point comment came from Blacknight Solutions boss Michele Neylon. He wrote: “ICANN meetings are work, so returning to well equipped facilities in accessible locations shouldn’t be a problem.”
A change of policy on meeting locations could also incidentally go some way to address the perception (not, I think, held by people who actually attend them) that ICANN spaffs cash jetting its community around the world on a series of cocktail-fuelled exotic jollies.
The most famous expression of this belief came perhaps in a 2008 Computerworld article, picked up by the Wall Street Journal, that ICANN was little more than a borderline corrupt “Club Med for geeks”.
But the effort to reform the meetings strategy is purely a financial one. ICANN wants to cut the cost of meetings at a time when its revenues can no longer be relied upon to predictably head north every year.
Perhaps the key idea in the new batch of proposals is whether to cut the length of its early-year Community Forum from six days to five, perhaps by rejiggering some of the scheduling so larger rooms at the venue do not need to be rented for as long.
There was much less agreement here. Supporters of the idea included the Intellectual Property Constituency, which pointed out that IP lawyers have paid work with other clients that they could be getting on with with a day in hand.
Opponents of the idea included the Registrars Stakeholder Group, which said: “This is unlikely to save significant costs as travel needs, the biggest expense to ICANN, does not change, although hotel and venue costs would be reduced — at the expense of getting all the required work done.
Another idea that received mixed opinions was whether the ICANN board’s meetings with the community’s various stakeholder groups would be better consolidated into one community-wide session, to reduce what is often duplicative and navel-gazey work.
The Non-Commercial Stakeholders Group said the move was a good idea and would “significantly enhance transparency, promote collective understanding, and reduce redundancy from separate interactions”.
Opposing, the IPC said: “The perspective of an individual group can easily be diluted or ignored in community-wide engagement sessions. The IPC values its one-on-one time with the Board”.
Commenters addressed a range of other questions related to the ICANN-drafted proposals.
Notably, while ICANN already seems to have ruled out bringing in registration fees for its meetings, which are all currently free on the door, registrars as represented by the RrSG, Tucows and Blacknight all suggested a nominal attendance fee should still be considered.
Comments can be read here, or you can wait for the ICANN staff summary, which is due to be published next week.
Some people paid premiums for .hot domain hacks
Amazon Registry’s launch of three gTLDs last week saw some registrants pay premium prices for .hot domain hacks.
Zone file data shows domains such as moons.hot and slings.hot were registered towards to the end of the five-day Early Access Period, with the registrant likely paying close to a thousand bucks for each.
cums.hot, longs.hot, moneys.hot, mugs.hot, pots.hot and ups.hot have all been registered, seeming by a broad range of registrants, at regular general availability prices since EAP closed May 17.
The EAP was lightly subscribed, if the zones are a guide. There were a handful of defensive registrations towards the end of the week, along with a few context-appropriate keywords like piping.hot.
.hot launched at the same time as .free and .spot, which don’t seem to have the same domain hack opportunities. Most EAP regs there were either defensives or keywords. Names like speak.free and live.free were registered.
As of today, .free is doing the best of the three, with 931 names in its zone, followed by .spot with 373 and .hot with 309.
.io questions in sharp focus as UK signs Chagos treaty
The UK government has signed a treaty handing over sovereignty of the Chagos archipelago to Mauritius, which could eventually turn out to be bad news for .io domain name owners.
Currently known as the British Indian Ocean Territory, Chagos was seized in the 1960s and 1970s, its citizens deported, and is home to a strategically important UK-US military base.
The new treaty (pdf) is not of course interested in issues as small-beer as ownership of ccTLDs — it’s much more concerned with the control of spectrum critical to running the base — but there are some elements of the text that may be cause for concern.
- A name change now seems inevitable. With Mauritius now assuming full sovereignty of the whole archipelago, the name BIOT seems destined for the trash heap of history. The treaty does not refer to BIOT once.
- The treaty does explicitly grant Mauritius control over “regulation of commercial activities, including the provision of electronic communications services, unrelated to the operation of the Base”.
- The UK is to inform the United Nations that it no longer exercises sovereignty over Chagos and Mauritius will also gain full representation for Chagos at the International Telecommunications Union.
Who gets to talk to the UN on behalf of the islands is important because of how country names and the codes used for ccTLDs are assigned.
The Statistics Division of the United Nations Secretariat publishes a standard known as M49, “Standard Country or Area Codes for Statistical Use”. That’s where ccTLD codes first appear.
That list is used by the International Organization for Standardization when it builds its ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 list, which is in turn used by ICANN/IANA to decide which territories qualify for a ccTLD and what the ccTLD is.
If Chagos is no longer recognised by the UN as a separate territory for statistical purposes, that would set a chain of events in motion that would see .io removed from the DNS root in five to 10 years.
If Chagos retains its place on the various lists, and Mauritius changes not only the name but the two-letter code, that would see .io retired and replaced with the ccTLD matching the new code, again in five to 10 years.
Or Mauritius could change the name, but not the code, meaning .io registrants would be safe. The ccTLD is believed to have over a million registrations and is popular with tech companies as a domain hack for I/O or input/output.
Identity Digital runs .io via a UK-based shell company it acquired several years ago. Perhaps sensing which way the wind was blowing, the company recently made a deal to become the back-end registry operator for .mu, the Mauritian ccTLD, so it has a foot in the door in the country.
Big .gdn registrar at risk
A registrar that exclusively sells .gdn domain names seems to have gone AWOL, and ICANN Compliance is on its case.
Dubai-based Intracom Middle East has been slapped with a breach notice alleging failures to operate a compliant RDAP server, publish the names of its officers, pay its ICANN fees, and escrow its registrant data.
Some of these breaches seem to be due to the fact that the company’s web site is missing in action, today returning NXDOMAIN errors, and has quite possibly been repeatedly hacked.
Archived versions of its site from last year show it was at various times a Polish risotto recipes splog, an Indian burger joint, and a manga cosplay porn site.
It’s Intracom’s second brush with Compliance. Three years ago the case was escalated to a three-month accreditation suspension for pretty much the same infractions.
Unlike most recent Compliance actions, which have been against registrars with essentially no domains under management, this times some domains are actually at risk — over 10,000 of them in fact.
Intracom specializes/d in selling .gdn domains for under a buck apiece. Apart from a few dozen registrations in a few other gTLDs, all of its 10,000 domains were in .gdn. It was once .gdn’s biggest registrar, though that’s no longer the case.
The company has been given to the end of the month to comply or risk termination.
ICANN “reaffirms its commitment to diversity and inclusion”
It’s not exactly a U-turn, but ICANN has issued a statement clarifying that it’s still committed to the values of “diversity and inclusion”, if perhaps not the words themselves.
CEO Kurt Lindqvist posted on the ICANN blog last night:
While some terminology may have changed, the values that guide our work have not. Our actions and commitments remain the same. We have not stepped back from, retreated from, or abandoned ICANN’s core values, or an environment where all voices are welcomed, respected, and valued.
The metadata summary of the post, which shows up in RSS feeds and such if not the visible components of the web page itself, reads: “ICANN reaffirms its commitment to diversity and inclusion amid recent updates to webpage language.”
There have been no changes to policy or ICANN programs like the Fellowship or NextGen, he wrote.
The post follows the revelation last Thursday that ICANN had expunged almost all references to “diversity” and “inclusion” from a page formerly called “Diversity at ICANN” and now called “Representation at ICANN”.
What Lindqvist’s clarification does not clarify, or even address, are the reasons why ICANN felt the need to suddenly and sharply distance itself from language it has been enthusiastically promoting for over a year.
But perhaps no explanation is necessary. Anyone paying a modicum of attention to US politics this year can’t have failed to notice that the abbreviation “DEI” — diversity, equity, inclusion — has become politically toxic and the target of attacks from the Trump administration and its loyal MAGA followers.
What we seem to be looking at here is the ICANN equivalent of the Department of Defense panickedly erasing the Enola Gay from its web site.
While ICANN’s structural ties to the US government have been pretty loose and minimal since the IANA transition in 2016, it really doesn’t need to find itself fighting off a Trump attempt to renationalize the root.
ICANN kills off diversity and inclusion
ICANN seems to have become the latest American organization to back away from commitments to “diversity” and “inclusion” in the wake of a universe now controlled by the whims of Donald Trump.
The Org has recently started removing references to the D-word from its web site, sloppily editing its diversity-related web pages, replacing it with the less politically loaded term “representation”.
The “Diversity at ICANN” page is now called the “Representation at ICANN” page, and ICANN’s stated commitments have been changed from:
ICANN is entrusted with ensuring the stability, resiliency, and interoperability of the Internet’s unique identifier systems in an open Internet, and was founded on the belief that it should reflect the diversity of the Internet community.
to:
ICANN is entrusted with ensuring the stability, resiliency, and interoperability of the Internet’s unique identifier systems Internet and was founded on the belief that it should represent the broad Internet community.
The words “inclusive” and “inclusion”, also from the now apparently toxic “DEI” abbreviation, also seem to be deemed inappropriate. ICANN has changed its web site language from:
To live up to this responsibility, ICANN is committed to promoting greater diversity and supporting broad, inclusive participation in its processes.
to the apparently hastily edited (random comma in original):
To live up to this responsibility, ICANN is committed to supporting broad, participation in its processes.
The page no longer contains links to ICANN’s Diversity & Inclusion Toolkit, a set of educational materials designed to tell people that asking other community members where they come from means they’re a racist.
Also gone is the link to an ICANN Learn course on “Unconscious Bias”, which teaches you that not all nurses are female and not all CEOs are white men and apparently ICANN has money to burn.
While ICANN previously said it offers its staff “Diversity & Inclusion Training”, it now says it offers “Culture Training”.
All six references to “inclusion” present in the November 2024 archived page have been removed from today’s live page. All five uses of the word “inclusive” have also been deleted.
The November archive uses the word “diversity” 32 times and “diverse” twice. On the live page, those counts are down to two (where the word was used to refer to a named group or report), and none, respectively.
The link to “Diversity at ICANN” in the web site’s site-wide footer has also been removed.
Some of the edits are incredibly sloppy. The old page had a bullet point that read:
Community-wide surveys on Age Diversity and Participation and Gender Diversity and Participation
The findings offer insights into perceptions of gender and age diversity in the community, potential and perceived barriers to participation, and the community’s support for initiatives to enhance age and gender diversity.
But that now reads:
Community-wide surveys and
The findings offer insights into perceptions of gender and age in the community, potential and perceived barriers to participation, and the community’s support for initiatives to enhance understanding.
ICANN’s backtracking from earlier virtue signalling comes at a point in history when corporate America is steering away from DEI initiatives lest they incur the wrath of US President Donald Trump.
The question is: is this all just cosmetic, or will it affect ICANN policy?
The Org is currently considering changes to its Community Anti-Harassment Policy that would change the boundaries of what is considered acceptable behavior at ICANN meetings.
The proposed changes would either, depending on your point of view, a) make life more comfortable for people with protected characteristics, or b) make it easier to get cancelled for a cultural faux pas.
It’s been a few months since the public comments closed on the policy changes, so ICANN board action shouldn’t be far off. Will the Org’s retreat from DEI have an impact on its decision?
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