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Dated,
February 14, 2008
http://www.domain-b.com
At its 31st public meeting currently
underway in New Delhi, the (Internet Corporation for
Assigned Names and Numbers ICANN)
said that it was exploring the possibility of introducing
top level domain names in local language and local scripts.
At present while India has introduced
domain names at the secondary level in the local language,
the top-level domain names are still in the American
ASCII code.
The Indian experts in charge of language
development in the ministry
of information technology as well as programme head
of Centre
for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC) Mahesh
Kulkarni shared India's experience in developing a primer
on how the 22 Indian languages can be categorised and
what scripts and script families are.
Development of language tables, policy
issues for Indic scripts also figured in the discussions.
Senior experts from ICANN debated on the complexities
involved in non-English languages as alternate spellings
pose a problem. According to Indian experts only homographs
are being considered and C-DAC had achieved Unicode
character set finalisation for inclusion in the IDN.
The ICANN public meeting, which began
on 11th February, draws to a close tomorrow 15 February.
Speaking on the meeting, ICANN's board chairman Peter
Dengate Thrush said, "India and Asia are at the
heart of the internet's future - a future that ICANN
is working on. internet penetration in India is at just
over five per cent and growing fast - considering that
one per cent is 11 million people coming online. ICANN's
work on Internationalised Domain Names and new top-level
domains has the potential to reach out to rest of India
and begin remaking the Internet as people connect in
their own languages and scripts."
ICANN's IDN programme is making about
close to 100,000 characters from the languages of the
world available at the top level - the part after the
dot - so users can benefit from a domain name in fully
localised language or script," said Tina Dam, ICANN's
IDN programme director. "India has 22 official
languages and has done a great deal of foundation work
on how languages and scripts - or the collection of
characters used in a language - can be categorized and
used. There are a lot of lessons for the world coming
out of the work being done in India."
"As ICANN moves forward to making
the scripts and languages of the world available in
all levels of domain names, the work being done in India,
and the lessons learnt, will make an immeasurable contribution
to the people of the world being able to get their name
in their language for their Internet," Dam said.

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