Internet Addresses to Become More International

Oct 28
2009

Continuing our focus on the Internet (it is, after all, 40 years since the Internet started to exist as the ARPANET): the ICANN recently approved non-Latin web addresses. In laymans terms, web addresses will no longer be limited to characters within or similar to the English alphabet, or numbers. Well probably see website domains in Arabic, Chinese, and Russian scripts.

Its news that should please the Internets non-English users and domain name speculators alike. The former will now enjoy a web thats no longer limited to English, potentially opening it up to new users. The latter will now have more names to grab online, in the hopes that they can sell it later on for a higher price. I have no idea how to spell house in Arabic, but you can bet someone will secure that word once it can be registered as a domain name.

Personally, I think making the foundation of the internet—domain names—more internationally will help the Internet go beyond its heavily-English origins, but at least one reader of the BBC article shared a great insight: There is a danger that the internet a tool for culture, information sharing and dialog on a non-national level, may become irreversibly fragmented.

What the reader meant was that, with web addresses set to become more friendly to locals throughout the world, the need to understand whats currently the universal language of the net (English) diminishes. Why bother exploring the world wide web when theres already a lot available in your own language/script? Ironically, this push to make the web more universal may end up making it more fragmented.

What do you think? Feel free to comment below.

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