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Multilingualisation Standard for Internet Names

Multilingualisation Standard for Internet Names. Wael Nasr General Manager, Middle East i-DNS.net. Abstract. Different technologies and approaches for the multilingualisation of Internet domain names and email addresses have been

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Multilingualisation Standard for Internet Names

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  1. Multilingualisation Standard for Internet Names Wael Nasr General Manager, Middle East i-DNS.net

  2. Abstract Different technologies and approaches for the multilingualisation of Internet domain names and email addresses have been considered by the IETF and a standard based on punycode, termed IDNA was recently established (Mar 03) The details of IDNA along with ideas for its implementation in the arab world will be addressed.

  3. Outline • History of the Internet • The Domain Name System • Limitations of the Existing Domain Name System • Introduction to Internationalized Domain Name (IDN) System • How IDN Works • History of IDN • The IETF Standardization Process • The IDNA Standard • ICANN Approval • Present Status of Adoption of IDN • Conclusion

  4. History of the Internet

  5. Year Milestone 1958 • US President Eisenhower requests funds to start ARPA 1972 • ARPANET begins its evolution into the Internet following the invention of TCP/IP by American academics/researchers 1984 • The concept of using Domain Names System (DNS) as • the infrastructure for DNS resolution process is introduced • Domain Names become a functional convenience • to Internet browsing • Commercialization of the Internet 1986 • Internet Engineering Task Force established to over- • see the creation of Protocol Specification Internet - How It All Began

  6. 1992 • Internet Society (ISOC) is set up to provide leadership to IETF and IAB in addressing issues relating to Internet infrastructure standards 1993 • InterNIC, a registered service mark of the U.S. Department of Commerce (DoC), is created to provide DN registration services 1998 • US DoC releases Green and White Paper outlining its plan to privatize DNS • US DoC enters into an agreement with the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), establishing a process for transitioning DNS from US Government Management to Industry. 1999 • Explosion of domain names registrations. The fourth millionth domain name is registered in March and the fifth millionth domain name is registered in May.

  7. The Domain Name System

  8. The Domain Name System • Strings of IP numbers are hard to remember • Domain names facilitate easy recall for access to websites http://www.i-DNS.net = http://209.249.141.24 • End user enters www.i-DNS.net • Server matches that with its corresponding IP address • End user is brought to the requested website

  9. What Are Domain Names Used For Nowadays? • Website & Portal: http://www.yahoo.com • Email Address: hassan@gcc.org • FTP: ftp.zdnet.com • Other TCP/IP protocols such as Telnet, and Gopher etc. • Essential Digital Branding in the Internet Economy • Commercial Value of Domain Names

  10. Emerging Trend towards a Multilingual Internet Source, Afternic.com, 2000 • Solution Required: Internationationalized Domain Names

  11. Limitations of the Existing Domain Name System

  12. Problems with the current DNS • Only allows a limited set of 38 alphanumeric characters • A to Z, 0-9, the hyphen and the dot • Have to be in English even though: • There are many languages in the world; and • People from all over the world use the Internet

  13. Challenge to non-English users • Cumbersome • Deter usage • Does not allow branding in the familiar native script • Results in Digital Divide - Between economic classes - Between English literates and non-English literates

  14. Introduction to Internationalized Domain Names (IDN)

  15. What are Internationalized Domain Names (IDN)? IDN refers to Domain Names which contain characters beyond the characters found on a standard ENGLISH keyboard, i.e. characters beyond “A-Z”, “0-9”, “-” and “.”

  16. Benefits of IDN • A more intuitive Internet experience. • Gives people the freedom of choice • Preserves cultural and linguistic integrity • Empowers non-native English users to come online and tap the power of the Internet. • Creates new opportunities for enterprises to establish their own identity online. • Entrenches a company's web identity and web presence • Creates an affinity with the non-English speaking business market by speaking their language. • Opens up new business markets

  17. How IDN Works

  18. How IDN works Server-side Solution Client-side Solution

  19. How IDN Looks

  20. History of Internationalized Domain Names (IDN)

  21. Apr 1998 Internet Research Development Unit, National University of Singapore implements iDNS pilot project Jul 1998 Asia Pacific Networking Group (APNG) sets up Chairman’s Commission to create a more robust Domain Name Server – iDNS Aug – Dec 1998 APNG Chairman visits countries in the Asia Pacific, creating regional awareness and interest in the project 1998

  22. Jan 1999 First Prototype of iDNS developed under the auspicies of APNG. Feb 1999 Presentation of iDNS at APRICOT’99 (Singapore). Asia-Pacific iDNS Testbed initiated with several Asian cctlds and NICs participating. Jun 1999 Progress report of Asia-Pacific iDNS Testbed at INET’99 (San Jose) 1999

  23. 1999 Oct 1999 iDNS.net, a company was spun-off from the APNG testbed and National University of Singapore. Concept of MINC – a non-profit Multilingual Internationalized Names Consortium - was initiated to oversee and coordinate commercial efforts like i-DNS.net. Dec 1999 iDNS BoF at IETF’46 (Washington) conducted by i-DNS.net CTO at the invitaion of IETF.

  24. Jan 2000 IDN WG formed by IETF ( i-DNS.net CTO and Viagenie CTO are co-chairs) Mar 2000 Apr 2000 IDN WG Meeting at IETF’47 (Adelaide) [Requirements for IDN] In 2000 a few other IDN companies start Jun 2000 MINC Launch in Korea (Seoul) 2000

  25. 2000 Aug 2000 IDN WG Meeting at IETF’48 (Pittsburg) [Design Teams Formed] Verisign/i-DNS.net announce ML.com Nov 2000 ICANN IDN Workshop (LA) Versign/i-DNS.net ML.com nears 1 million IDN users Dec 2000 IDN WG Meeting at IETF’49 (San Diego)

  26. 2001-2003 • Many IETF meetings and arguments. Standardization is delayed by 2 years – normally 1 to 11/2 year process – owing to internal disagreement. • Meanwhile IDN deployment proceeds in well over 50 countries, with close to 2 million IDN names deployed in over 50 languages by a few companies and cctlds.

  27. The IETF Standardization Process

  28. IETF • IETF is a large open international community of network designers, operators, vendors, and researchers concerned with the evolution of the Internet architecture and the smooth operation of the Internet. • It is open to any interested individual. • Actual technical work is done in Working Group organized by topics in several areas.

  29. IETF IETF is divided in Areas • Applications Area • General Area • Internet Area Internationalized Domain Name (IDN) Working Grp (WG) • Operations and Management Area • Routing Area • Security Area • Transport Area • User Services Area

  30. IETF IDN WG • Created Dec 1999 , Closed April 2003. • Mailing List Archives • General Discussion: idn@ops.ietf.org • To subscribe: idn-request@ops.ietf.org • Archive: ftp://ops.ietf.org/pub/lists/idn* • Website http://www.i-d-n.net/ • Chairs of the now closed Working Group (1999-2003) • James Seng • Marc Blanchet

  31. The IDNA Standard

  32. Punycode(a main component of IDNA) • Punycode is a bootstring encoding of Unicode for Internationalized Domain Names in Applications. It uniquely and reversibly transforms a Unicode string into an ASCII string. ASCII characters in the Unicode string are represented literally, and non-ASCII characters are represented by ASCII characters that are allowed in host name labels (letters, digits, and hyphens). Selection of ACE encoding has gone through several stages, RACE, DUDE, AMC-Z and eventually PUNYCODE. PUNYCODE is chosen because it presents the best balance between algorithm complexity and length of the final ACE string. • the URL for PUNYCODE RFC is (ftp://ftp.rfc-editor.org/in-notes/rfc3492.txt)

  33. ICANN Approval

  34. ICANN Standards for ICANN Authorization of Internationalized Domain Name Registrations in Registries with Agreements http://www.icann.org/riodejaneiro/idn-topic.htm#5

  35. ICANN • At the same time, the premise of this paper is that it would be a mistake for ICANN to pursue a burdensome and/or intrusive approach to IDN implementation – for example, by putting ICANN in the position of approving a character-equivalence table for each language, and of maintaining such tables. The deployment of IDNA within existing top-level domain registries is fundamentally a registry responsibility, and the registries will be in the best position to make appropriate implementation decisions themselves, and should have the freedom to make adjustments as experience dictates. Just as DNS registries embrace a wide diversity in registration policies and administrative procedures, reflecting the diversity of local Internet communities, it seems apparent that the vast diversity of human character sets and the languages from which they come compels a language-by-language, registry-led approach to the development of detailed registration policies and administrative procedures.

  36. ICANN • Whereas, a three-part protocol suite defining a standard for internationalized domain names in applications was published as RFCs 3490, 3491, and 3492; • …… • It is: • Resolved [03.47] that the ICANN Board endorses the IDN implementation approach set forth in the draft Guidelines for the Implementation of Internationalized Domain Names, as they may be amended in further consultation with registry operators or evolve in view of new technical standards, for implementation of IDNs; • Resolved further [03.48] that the President is authorized to implement the Guidelines by authorizing registration of IDNs in registries with agreements with ICANN on the basis of those Guidelines;

  37. Present Status of Adoption of IDNA

  38. Deployment of IDN since 1999 • Although IDNA standard was defined in Mar 2003, IDN has been deployed worldwide since December 1999, when i-DNS.net launched in the Chinese language in Taiwan • Since then close to 2 million IDN names have been deployed in close to a 100 languages. • Most registered IDN has been in Chinese, Korean & Japanese (90%). Arabic is ~ 1 to 2 %

  39. Those who have adopted IDNA or expected to soon i-DNS.net is amongst the first IDN providers to adopt the IDNA standard, since the standard is very close to what i-DNS.net and the National University of Singapore proposed back in 97/98 PRESS RELEASE • General, i-DNS.net International, 2 May 2003 -- i-DNS.net will be launching Punycode for multilingual domain names starting on 2nd June 2003. Punycode will be used for all existing and new multilingual domain names. • The Migration Plan starting in May will prepare all existing multilingual domain names, or IDNs, for Punycode. The Company has also upgraded all of its IDN-related Software to support this new IETF standard. • i-DNS.net, the IDN leader who thru its beginnings at the National University of Singapore pioneered the IDN movement in early 1998, is once again proud to be amongst the few if not the first IDN provider to pioneer adoption of this new IETF standard, 3 years in the making.

  40. Those who have adopted or expected to do so soon JPRS – the commercial vehicle of JPNIC that provides “japanese”.jp in Japan is to adopt IDNA in June 2003. Verisign – that provides “IDN”.com worldwide has said it will adopt IDNA later in 03.

  41. Conclusion With the standard in place, its time for the Arabic World to safely increase the rate of adoption of Arabic internet domain and email addresses which began in 2000 The time is NOW … MORE THAN 10M Arabs out there waiting to use the internet in Arabic.

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