Friday, March 06, 2009

Vatican Tells ICANN That Religious gTLDs Are a Problem

The Register yesterday reports on a Feb. 20 comment letter (full text) from the Vatican to ICANN expressing concern over the possible approval of Internet top level domain names that reflect religious traditions. The letter reads in part:
the Holy See would like to bring to the attention of the Board of ICANN the possible perils connected with the assignment of new gTLDs with reference to religious traditions (e.g., .catholic, .anglican, .orthodox, .hindu, .islam; .muslim, .buddhist, etc…). These gTLDs could provoke competing claims among theological and religious traditions and could possibly result in bitter disputes that would force ICANN, implicitly and/or explicitly, to abandon its wise policy of neutrality by recognizing to a particular group or to a specific organization the legitimacy to represent a given religious tradition.
A Feb. 24 response suggests that the proposed process for established institutions to file community objections to a proposed gTLD application may be a method of dealing with the Vatican's concerns, but seeks further consultations on the issue.