Technical protocols to support the extension of the internet address system to languages such as Chinese and Arabic should be finalised this year, ICANN boss Paul Twomey says. Resolution of the difficulties will mean millions of new users can come online using phone books
in their own languages, with internationalised domain names spelling the end of English-speaking domination of the world wide web. The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers has been wrestling with the technical difficulties involved in integrating non-Roman character sets into the uniform domain name system (DNS) technology — the .com and .net address hierarchy that uniquely identifies all computers and resources attached to the global network
Internet Addresses get Foreign Language Support
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