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News > February 2008

20-Feb-2008

.Asia Now Open to Public - Landrush Begins

.Asia is now open to all comers having been restricted to governments and organisations for several months. Just 30,000 applications have been filed for the .Asia domain names since October; this is compared with over 330,000 at the same stage for the .eu domain name in April 2006.

Netnames has warned that the opening of .Asia domain registrations to the public will mean that businesses are at risk of losing their online trademarks to competitors or worse to cyber-squatters. UK businesses seem to be slow to register their applications when compared to their US and German counterparts. So far just over 2,000 have been made when compared to 30,000 filed prior to the eu. land rush.

"The alarm bells should be ringing for any company which has yet to secure its trademarks in .asia," said Jonathan Robinson, chief operating officer at NetNames. "As of today, there is far less protection for company trademarks and it is open season on the .asia domain name for cyber-squatters, online speculators and competitors." Robinson added that demand for .asia has been understated, which means that many businesses are likely to miss out. "As the first .asia sites go live we are sure to see a number of high-profile, costly disputes which could so easily have been avoided," he said.

Applications for the new domain were staggered over three time periods in an attempt to avoid the confusion and chaos surrounding the .eu domain launch. The first period began on 9 October for government bodies and companies with registered trademarks. The second period began on 13 November when registration opened to those companies with an official presence in Asia, regardless of trademarks.

Organisations which had already secured registered trademarks could then secure additional domains related specifically to their line of business. The third and final period has now begun with registrations now open to the general public. Any domain names with more than one application will be auctioned off to the highest bidder before .asia goes live on 26 March.