Business Magazine

We Said It Over A Year Ago, The BC Tells ICANN Allowing Singular & Plural New gTLD’s Are A Bad Idea

Posted on the 25 October 2013 by Worldwide @thedomains

In a letter sent to ICANN, the Chair, ICANN Business Constituency (BC) told ICANN what we at TheDomains.com said over a year ago, that allowing new gTLD’s of plural and singular of the same term is a bad idea.

“As we move towards the launch of the first new gTLDs this year, the Business Constituency is extremely concerned about ICANN’s intention to delegate both singular and plural versions of the same string.

“We believe that allowing singular and plural versions of the same TLD string will confuse users and frustrate efforts by registrants to build awareness of new domains in new TLDs. The existence of identical second-level domains and their corresponding email addresses on nearly identical TLDs could also create vulnerability to spoofing and phishing fraud. Moreover, conflicting decisions are generating predictably negative reaction and will undermine the credibility of ICANN and our multi-stakeholder model.

“Looking further ahead, launching both singular and plural versions of the same string would set a troubling precedent for future gTLD rounds, where applicants could file for plural versions of existing TLDs or new TLDs approved during the present expansion. It’s inconceivable that ICANN would allow this in future Guidebooks, but that would require a reversal of today’s policy and expose the entirely avoidable mistake of allowing singulars and plurals in the current round.

“An ideal opportunity to reconsider the singular/plural decisions of ICANN’s string similarity panels was provided in March through the Beijing GAC Communiqué:

The GAC believes that singular and plural versions of the string as a TLD could lead to potential consumer confusion. Therefore the GAC advises the ICANN Board to Reconsider its decision to allow singular and plural versions of the same strings.

However, ICANN’s Board disregarded GAC Advice and stuck by existing mechanisms and prior expert decisions.

The rationale given by the Board revealed concern that making changes in singular/plural TLDs “would cause a ripple effect and re-open the decisions of all expert panels.” While this is a valid concern, we believe it is far outweighed by the Board’s obligation to ensure that TLD expansion validates the effectiveness of the ICANN model in serving the public interest of global Internet users.

In its arbitration decisions over the past several weeks, the International Center for Dispute Resolution (ICDR) has ruled in certain cases that singular and plural versions of the same string are indeed confusingly similar (.sport/.sports, .pet/.pets, .game/.games, .tour/.tours).


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