Germany outraces UK on .eu internet registrations

Published: 27 January 2006 y., Friday

Since the launch of the .eu internet domain registrations last month, more than 165,000 companies around the EU have made applications, with registrants in Germany accounting for over a third of the total number.

Latest statistics show that out of 166,232 applications so far, 34.7 percent were German, followed by Dutch with 15.6 percent and France with 13.4 percent.

Only one out of ten applications are from the UK, causing worries among British internet experts that competitors or so-called "cyber squatters" - people who buy up web addresses with the same name as groups or companies and sell them on - may target British brand names for their use.

"British companies must act quickly to ensure their online brands are protected across Europe. Applications are dealt with in the order they are received, so any delay could cause your brand significant damage if your trademarks and names are registered by another party," a spokesperson for domain name specialist NetNames told DomainInformer.

Registration for the .eu domain name is currently only open to trademark and prior rights holders in the European Union.

Applicants are required to submit documentary evidence of their right to the domain within 40 days of an application being made, a mechanism to prevent that two or more companies claim the right to the same web address.

A "first come, first served" policy for companies with equal claim to a specific domain name will be applied at the selection.

Costly judicial processes over brand names and the right to attractive web addresses may mount however, as a first forecast indicates that some names will be fought for.

Šaltinis: euobserver.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

E-sting nets 2 Russian hackers

FBI alleges pair stole credit info more »

Netscape SmartDownload opens up PCs to attack

A security flaw in Netscape's SmartDownload browser plug-in leaves users vulnerable to attack even if the application is disabled. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

The settlements

Web sites fined for violating children's privacy policy more »

UK Govt shuts e-govt portal

The Government is to shut down its award-winning open.gov.uk Web portal - best described as the front door to Britain's e-government services - in July. more »

Support for additional languages

VeriSign expands domain names to more than 350 languages more »

Webcasting as "leading next-generation IT industry"

Korean Government Backs National Webcasting Industry more »

The agreement

RIAA composes Net radio license for start-up more »

Spy Plane No Longer for Sale

Auctioneer Pulls Listing After a Day more »

Gaping Digital Divide Remains in Latin America

The digital divide, as it relates to both basic telephone service and the Internet, is widening in Latin America, according to Gartner's Dataquest unit. more »