News & Information for Technology Purchasers
NewsFactor Network Sites:   NewsFactor.com Security CRM Business Sci-Tech Newsletters XML/RSS Feed  
   
Home Enterprise I.T. Hardware Software Communications More Topics...
Personal Tech
Average Rating:
Rate this article:  
Egypt To Apply for First Arabic Domain Name Egypt To Apply for First Arabic Domain Name
By Tarek El-tablawy
November 17, 2009 7:16AM

    Bookmark and Share
The prospective new users in developing nations face a number of challenges, ranging from monetary constraints to restrictions on their liberty -- as evidenced by an announcement in Iranian media that officials were deploying a special police unit to sweep web sites for political material and prosecute those deemed to be spreading lies.
 



Egypt will apply for the first Internet domain written in Arabic, its information technology minister said Sunday at a conference grouping Yahoo's co-founder and others to discuss boosting online access in emerging nations.

Tarek Kamel said Egypt on Monday would apply for the new domain -- pronounced ".masr" but written in the Arabic alphabet -- making it the first Arab nation to apply for a non-Latin character domain. The effort is part of a broader push to expand both access and content in developing nations, where the Internet remains out of reach for wide swaths of the population.

The registering of the domain "will offer new avenues for innovation, investment and growth, and hence we can truly and gladly say ... the Internet now speaks Arabic," Kamel said at the start of the Internet Governance Forum -- a U.N.-sponsored gathering that drew Net legends like Yahoo Inc.'s Jerry Yang and Tim Berners-Lee, known as one of the Internet's founding fathers.

"It is a great moment for us," Kamel said of the domain name, which translates as ".Egypt".

The new domains stem from a decision taken at the end of October by the board of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, a key Internet oversight agency, to develop a "fast-track" mechanism for domain names in languages such as Chinese, Korean, Arabic and others that do not use the Latin alphabet.

The decision marks a key step in the Arab world, where a mixture of censorship, limited content and access have stymied efforts to boost Arabic-language content on the Web.

The dearth of content has opened new market opportunities for Internet companies, with Yahoo, for example, recently acquiring Arab online community Web site Maktoob.com.

Yang said that while there are over 300 million Arabic speakers in the world, less than 1 percent of the content online is in Arabic.

As part of the company's push to boost access in Arabic, Yang said Yahoo would offer its mail and messenger service Relevant Products/Services in Arabic next year. He did not provide an exact date.

Yang said there are approximately 325 million Internet users in emerging markets -- a figure expected to grow 19 percent yearly through 2012. In all, about 75 percent of the world's population is still not online.

The prospective new users in developing nations face a number of challenges, ranging from monetary constraints to restrictions on their liberty -- as evidenced by an announcement in Iranian media Saturday that officials were deploying a special police unit to sweep Web sites for political material and prosecute those deemed to be spreading lies.

The move reflected the influence the Web had in mobilizing Iranians -- and informing the outside world -- during the country's disputed presidential election in June -- a vote that brought tens of thousands of Iranians into the streets in protests of what President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's opponents claimed was massive fraud.

It also underscores the challenges Internet companies face in some countries and in hosting content deemed by some governments as subversive.

Many of the new users from emerging markets "will need Web content, and want more content, in their native language and still others won't just be bound by language and barriers, but have other challenges such as reading, liberty," Yang said.

The challenge "isn't just about getting as many people online as possible, but making sure that once they get online, they have something productive to do, something to gain, something meaningful to experience."
 


© 2010 Associated Press under contract with YellowBrix. All rights reserved.
 

Tell Us What You Think
Your Comment:



Advertisement


 Personal Tech
1.   Nvidia Auto-Switches Notebook GPU
2.   Macworld Focuses on Mobile Apps
3.   MS: Windows 7 Doesn't Hurt Battery
4.   Nexus One 'Support' Passes the Buck
5.   Google May Make Gmail More Social


advertisement
EPIC Objects To Google-NSA TiesEPIC Objects To Google-NSA Ties
Cyberattack meant to rattle Google?
Average Rating:
Symbian 3 Is Now Fully Open SourceSymbian 3 Is Now Fully Open Source
But mobile OS remains linked to Nokia.
Average Rating:
Sony Ericsson Unveils Aspen HandsetSony Ericsson Unveils Aspen Handset
Windows Mobile unit comes with Skype.
Average Rating:


advertisement
Product Information and Resources for Technology You Can Use To Boost Your Business

Enterprise Hardware Spotlight
Nvidia Auto-Switches Notebook GPU To Save Battery Life
Nvidia has taken the wraps off a notebook technology that chooses the best graphics processor for any given application and automatically routes the workload to Nvidia or Intel processors.
 
Microsoft Says Battery Woes Not Caused By Windows 7
Battery problems on Windows 7 machines are not caused by the operating system. That's the position of Stephen Sinofsky, head of the Windows division, in a long posting on the Windows engineering blog.
 
IBM's New POWER7 Servers Save Energy with Big Loads
IBM has unveiled high-capacity servers that are the first to be based on its new, multi-core POWER7 chip. It said the new line is designed "to manage the most demanding emerging applications."
 

Enterprise Technology Spotlight
Google May Add Facebook, Twitter Links to Gmail
Google will reportedly roll more social-networking features into Gmail, the fastest-growing e-mail service. The new features could save users the trouble of switching to Facebook or Twitter.
 
IBM's New POWER7 Servers Save Energy with Big Loads
IBM has unveiled high-capacity servers that are the first to be based on its new, multi-core POWER7 chip. It said the new line is designed "to manage the most demanding emerging applications."
 
IBM Opens Eco-Friendly, Cloud-Focused Data Center
IBM has opened its latest data center in North Carolina. Big Blue said the $362 million facility in Research Triangle Park is designed to support cloud computing and other new computing models.
 

Navigation
NewsFactor Network
Home/Top News | Enterprise I.T. | Hardware | Software | Communications | Network Security | Wireless Tech | Linux/Open Source
Apple/Macintosh | Microsoft/Windows | World Wide Web | Data Storage | E-Commerce | Personal Tech | Tech Trends | Press Releases
NewsFactor Network Enterprise I.T. Sites
NewsFactor Technology News | Enterprise Security Today | CRM Daily

NewsFactor Business and Innovation Sites
Sci-Tech Today | NewsFactor Business Report

NewsFactor Services
FreeNewsFeed | Free Newsletters | Free Whitepapers | XML/RSS Feed

About NewsFactor Network | How To Contact Us | Article Reprints | Careers @ NewsFactor | Services for PR Pros | Top Tech Wire | How To Advertise

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service
© Copyright 2000-2010 NewsFactor Network. All rights reserved. Article rating technology by Blogowogo.