
In 2007, ICANN had a run of "My name, My language, My Internet" t-shirts printed to highlight the launch of a test website for 11 IDN scripts, which made the fast-track possible. The t-shirts had "example.test" written on them in the same 11 scripts.
[FONT=verdana,arial,helvetica,sans-serif]Last year, ICANN sent 252 letters to the governments and ccTLD managers of the world to let them know that they would soon be able to request an IDN national suffix and asking them if they were interested in obtaining one.
Of the responses received so far - a total of 74, with a small number of respondents requesting confidentiality - 31 were expressions of interest from governments or ccTLD managers (who are generally either under direct government control or affiliated with their national authority in some way).
So that means a little over 12% take-up. Is that enough to justify a special procedure? I don't really think so to be honest, even though the level of interest for IDN extensions actually doesn't seem too bad. But the fast-track that ICANN is planning in order to hasten the launch of IDN ccTLDs while its full IDN program continues to be readied leaves me with a feeling of overkill.[/FONT]
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