Cybersquatters target new domain names

Users will have to rush to buy up their names in the new top-level domains approved last week, or risk becoming victims of a potentially costly new wave of cybersquatting.

Andy McCue, Computing

Users will have to rush to buy up their names in the new top-level domains approved last week, or risk becoming victims of a potentially costly new wave of cybersquatting.

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (Icann) has approved seven new top-level domains, including .info, .biz and .coop, in response to the increasing pressure on current top-level domains such as .com and .org. The domains should go live in July next year.

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According to figures from analyst firm Gartner, a typical enterprise user should expect to pay $70,000 to cover itself across all domains with a maintenance figure of around $20,000 a year.

Analysts and domain name registrars warned that any company with an identifiable brand and web presence faces the prospect of registering at least 300 name variants by the end of next year - to avoid cybersquatters or competitors hijacking its brand.

"Any enterprise that has or plans to have an internet presence should develop a domain naming strategy that goes beyond dotcom," said Audrey Apfel, enterprise network strategies and internet strategies analyst at Gartner.

Domain name registrars warned that how Icann rolls out the new domains will be critical in restricting cybersquatting.

"If Icann opens it up to speculative buying and therefore to lawsuits, a lot of time, money and frustration will be spent in recovering names from cybersquatters," warned Niamh Cullen, marketing manager at Domain Audit.

The pattern that has emerged after only a week of the multilingual domains being opened up is a sign of things to come, said Tom Barrett, chief executive of Netnames.

"Nearly 600,000 names have been registered in the four different character sets already. These cybersquatting issues are happening now in the multi-lingual space," he added.

First published in Computing

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Further reading

Domain name 'scam' uncovered

The US government has moved to halt what it claims is an internet domain name scam that has duped as many as 27,000 small businesses in the US.

ISP moves to fix domain name problems

Virtual Internet will next week launch an improved version of its automated domain name registration service, Nomodo, after admitting that "flakey" technology had caused problems for some customers.

Snappy website eases domain name pains

A web site plans to launch a name-protection service in January 2001 that assists companies in registering, managing and back-ordering new or previously-owned internet domain names.

Companies won't pay for .biz domains

Big-name companies are refusing to shell out for new Icann domain names, despite the threat of cybersquatters, while smaller firms weigh up the advantages.

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