China Shoots Down VeriSign's Web Domain System

Published: 25 November 2000 y., Saturday
The Chinese government has reportedly mandated that only nine domestic firms may assign Chinese-language Internet addresses, thus quashing plans by domain-name giant, US-based VeriSign Inc., to make a major entry into the burgeoning Chinese market. The move pits VeriSign's Internet registrar service (formerly Network Solutions, and still the only official domain name registry for .com, .org and .net) and other foreign address-registration firms against government-supported Chinese firms in the rush to register domains in Chinese script, according to a Reuters report today. The two sides have launched competing standards for Chinese-script Web addresses, or domain names, as thousands of confused companies rush to register with both sides. China's Web users have doubled about every six months since early 1999 and are now estimated at 20 million. Reuters said it had downloaded a message from the Ministry of Information Industry which stated, "Without prior approval, no organization or individual is allowed to manage, provide services for or act as an agent for Chinese-language domain name registration." The notice, published on the ministry's Web site, http://www.mii.gov.cn, vests the China Internet Network Information Center (CNNIC) with sole authority over registration of Chinese-character domain names. The semi-official CNNIC, in turn, named nine domestic companies, but no foreign entities, to effect registrations. China claims it is protecting its sovereignty and that Chinese technology allows all-script domain names, whereas VeriSign’s software requires the dot-com or other extensions to be written in Roman characters.
Šaltinis: Newsbytes.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

New service

Austrians can use mobiles to monitor Czech, Slovak radiation more »

Antivirus companies consider 'Coronex' a low threat

New e-mail worm exploits SARS anxiety more »

First Ever Linux Summit In Finland A Success

The Linux Summit 2003, arranged by SOT in co-operation with HP, Oracle and F-Secure was a declared a success for both organizers and attendees more »

ITAA Calls for Cybersecurity Czar

The Information Technology Association of America is calling for the appointment of a "cyber czar" in the wake of the resignations of key White House cybersecurity advisors more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Estonia Blazes Internet Trail Back

Banking is actually booming in Estonia - via Internet more »

Poland snubs EU by buying US fighter jets

The $6.2b deal with Lockheed sparks outcry from not just European governments but also American unions more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

IBM Plans Sneak Attack On Microsoft Office

There will soon be another entrant in the lopsided Office wars more »

What Windows Server 2003 Will Mean for IT

There will be performance improvements and cool features in Microsoft's new server, but if an enterprise is a volume licensing customer or an NT 4.0 shop, the choice to upgrade may be no choice at all more »