News
Autumn issue of .eu Identity available
This issue includes practical tips about complying with the
European Union’s Cookie Directive and useful advice from expert Samuel Colak on
whether apps are suitable for your business.
.eu websites are used by inspiring companies. The magazine features the German motor racing team InterNetX-Reiter and their behind-the-scenes support from web hosting and public relations companies that all use .eu for their web presence. It is not only small- to medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in the frame as .eu websites from some of Europe’s best-known companies and biggest brands are also showcased.
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.RU Hits 4 Million Domain Milestone
On 17 September 2012 an important event occurred in Russian domain space: a four-million–name was registered in domain .RU. The previous boundary of 3 500 000 domain names was marked in domain .RU 11 months ago.
By the number of registered domain names Russian ccTLD .RU currently takes the 6th position among world ccTLDs and the 10th among all gTLDs. The rate of growth of ccTLD .RU in 2012 has and the annual growth of domain names accounts for 16%. It is one of the highest figures among major ccTLDs.
“4 000 000 domain names in .RU prove that Russian ccTLD is popular with users. Moreover, there are more than 800 000 domain names in the Cyrillic domain .РФ, therefore the total number of Russian domain names is coming to 5 000 000. It means that Internet in Russia is growing at high rate: the number of Internet users is growing, the interest of Russians in the network as a communication means is increasing and the domain names are more and more used for business development,” said CEO of Coordination Center for TLD .RU/.РФ Andrey Kolesnikov.
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Afnic Domain Name Industry Report issues its 1st key figures
Launched by Afnic for the first time in 2007, the purpose of the Domain Name Industry Report is to improve the understanding of domain names and the market players,while providing keys with which to analyze the strengths and weaknesses of the market. For this sixth edition, the Report, designed in partnership with T
DNS.be is looking for Java developers
DNS.be is looking for talented people to develop a new version of the registration system using the most modern technologies.
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.kiwi.nz launch pushes domain names past half-million mark
InternetNZ (Internet New Zealand Inc) subsidiary the Domain Name Commission has today launched a new second level domain – .kiwi.nz – a move that has pushed the total number of .nz registrations past 500,000.
Domain Name Commissioner Debbie Monahan expresses delight at the half-million .nz registrations and .kiwi.nz launch, describing today as a landmark day for the New Zealand Internet.
The 500,000 milestone comes nearly ten years after InternetNZ introduced a competitive market for .nz domain name registrations. There are now over 80 organisations providing .nz registration services, and Monahan credits their role and commitment in spurring the tremendous growth in .nz names.
“Ultimately, this is the result of the willingness of many thousands of people who have chosen .nz names to represent themselves online, and the hard work that .nz registrars have done in promoting the .nz domain name space.”
Over the past ten years the .nz domain name space has experienced average yearly growth of 38,280, with the upward trajectory showing no signs of slowing. Monahan says this is partly because people identify strongly with the .nz domain. She points to a recent report from Europe which found that most businesses continue to put their faith in the local country’s domain, favouring these over generic names such as .com.
“New Zealanders have a choice when it comes to registering domain names, and we acknowledge and thank the half-million holders of .nz names for their support,” she says.
Monahan expects today’s introduction of the .kiwi.nz second-level will give further impetus to the .nz domain name space. What better way to demonstrate that New Zealand is your home than to register a new .kiwi.nz domain name,” she says.
Registrations for .kiwi.nz opened at 10am and in the first fifteen minutes over 1000 names were registered. Monahan thanks InternetNZ subsidiary NZRS for its firm stewardship of the .nz registry during today’s launch, saying it coped admirably with the influx of .kiwi.nz registrations.
More information about registering a .nz domain name is available online at http://dnc.org.nz/story/faq-registrants?m=324.
For more information contact:
Debbie Monahan
Domain Name Commissioner
021 891 620
.Me Registry announces five day social media contest
The .ME Registry, announced the
“You are Not a .com, You are a .ME” social media contest. The contest will run
from Sept. 17-21. All participants who take part on a daily basis will receive
a complimentary, one year .ME domain name registration. Three grand prize
winners will receive a Canon EOS Rebel T3 Camera. The .ME Registry will
announce grand prize winners on Twitter during the week of Oct. 1.
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SIDN's quarterly magazine The.nlyst out now
The eighth edition of The.nlyst – SIDN's quarterly magazine for everyone with a professional or personal interest in the .nl domain and the internet – came out this week. The magazine's focus this quarter is the new gTLDs. Following an application window earlier in the year, a wave of brand new internet extensions will shortly be redefining the internet landscape. The.nlyst accordingly examines the move to create .amsterdam, the Dutch capital's own top-level domainand describes the mechanism for objecting to a proposed new gTLD. There's also an interview with Richard Wein, CEO of Austria's nic.at registry, who talks about his organisation's gTLD-activities. Last but not least, The.nlyst includes a profile of .nl registrar InterNetX.
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Subscription
The.nlyst is distributed free of charge to SIDN's registrars and other stakeholders. Each edition is also made available in digital form on this website. If you would prefer to receive printed copies of the magazine by post, please e-mail your name, address and profession to
More than one million .nl domain names secured with DNSSEC
SIDN, the company behind .nl, announced today that the Dutch country-code domain now has more than 1 million DNSSEC domain names. This milestone is reached exactely one month after the .nl domain became the internet domain with more DNSSEC-secured domain names than any other domain on the internet.
Roadmap
As the internet’s roadmap, the DNS has always been vulnerable to criminal threats such as cache poisoning and ‘man-in-the-middle’ attacks by unidentified parties. The perpetrators of such attacks can divert internet users to fake websites or intercept e-mail, even though the correct domain name
is used. These vulnerabilities were underestimated until 2008, when Dan Kaminsky demonstrated that the DNS was easy to manipulate. Kaminsky’s revelations gave urgency to the worldwide rollout of DNSSEC, which had been in progress for some time. DNSSEC tackles the problems identified by Kaminsky. It provides a method for ascertaining whether an incoming DNS response is authentic and originates from the right source. The practical outcome of that is that the DNS is more reliable. In July 2010, ICANN signed the root zone and a month later SIDN followed suit by signing the .nl zone with DNSSEC. Once that had been done, early adopters had the opportunity to have trust anchors added to the .nl zone file during a Friends & Fans phase. On 15 May 2012, SIDN implemented DNSSEC in its Domain Registration System, making it possible for .nl registrars to automate the processes of signing domain names. Detailed information about DNSSEC is available fromwww.dnssec.nl (in Dutch only).
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The World Wide Web, by the Numbers
Tim Berners-Lee's vision for the World Wide Web was predicated on two core ideas: universality and connectivity. But now that the web has been around for a generation -- and, you know, changed the world, revolutionized information, etc., etc. -- how has it actually been adopted? Is the web, its obvious success notwithstanding, ultimately living up to its vision and its potential?
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Cleaning up Switzerland’s internet sites
Viruses and other malware are lurking not just on porn sites, but in places you might never expect. To make it safer to surf, the Switch foundation monitors the Swiss web for malicious code. As a result, Swiss computers are the least infected in the world.
“Error: the webpage cannot be displayed”. It’s not uncommon to get this kind of message when surfing on the web. So you check that the address has been typed correctly and try again, but the page still does not come up. Annoying? Yes, but it might be for your own good.
There are a number of reasons why a site may be inaccessible: connection problems, servers down, or updates in progress. But the site may also have been blocked deliberately for the sake of IT security.
“Some sites have got malicious code hidden in them that can infect a computer. The consequences can be serious: personal data and passwords may be stolen, or the whole system may crash”, explained IT expert Michael Hausding, who belongs to the Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) at Switch, the organisation that looks after Switzerland’s Internet access. “My job is to block infected sites and prevent the spread of malware and other harmful code.”
Although invisible to the Internet user, CERT is successfully holding the line for Switzerland against malware. According to the most recent report of the Panda Security company, Switzerland is the country with the least number of infected computers in the world (see sidebar). “Apart from our work there are the actions of the major Internet service providers, who inform their customers periodically about the current threats”, adds Hausding.
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