By
Tom Espiner
Thursday, March 02 2006 09:33 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/internet/0,39044908,39315335,00.htm
China has announced it is creating a new set of domain names based on
Chinese characters.
China has created three of its own top-level domains that will use the domain
names .cn, .com and .net, in Chinese. The domain names were launched Wednesday
by the Chinese Ministry of Information Industry.
The creation of Chinese character domain names has led to speculation that
China could break away from the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN)
completely, and undermine the global unity of the Domain Name System (DNS), the
network of servers that resolves
domain name requests.
"It means Internet users don't have to surf the Web via the servers under the
management of ICANN of the U.S.," reported the People's Daily Online, a Chinese
government-approved publication.
ICANN, though, declined to comment on China's plans as scant details have
been made available by the Chinese Ministry.
"We are intending to clarify the situation today. There's confusion about
whether China is creating top-level or second-level domains, because of an
ambiguous report. The situation is unclear at the moment," according to ICANN.
Internet experts are concerned that this move will see China administrating
its top-level domains with its own separate root servers, which could cause a
split in the Internet.
"Fragmentation is a concern both to ICANN and us because of end user
confusion," said Geir Rasmussen, chief executive of Global Name Registry, a
domain name registration organization that oversees the .name domain.
"Users might lose trust in the system if there are multiple versions of the
same domains. If someone launched a .name in a different root, you as an
end-user could not be sure which root you were using. It would be like having a
phone number that points to two different people," Rasmussen added.
Last year, several
countries objected to ICANN's power over the Internet, because it is
ultimately under the control of the U.S.
The European Union and other nations demanded that the U.S. share
responsibility for the DNS, including decisions over adding and deleting new
top-level domains, with the United Nations. The Bush
administration resisted them.
"There has been conflict with ICANN about who should govern the Internet. We
wouldn't be surprised if the Internet became fragmented, because some areas of
the world really don't feel included," Rasmussen said.
"The Internet up to now has been mostly Westernized, and some countries may
feel disenfranchised, as they can't access the Internet in their local
language," Rasmussen added. "I think this is about accessibility. Think if all
Westerners had to enter characters in Chinese script."