SINGAPORE--Starting Nov. 23, businesses and consumers in the country will be able to register URL or Web addresses based on Chinese characters. In a statement released Tuesday, national domain ...
Singapore has registered about 1,000 Chinese-language domain names since authorities began accepting name registrations last year, the government said. The Singapore Network Information Center (SGNIC) ...
While foreign companies are quickly recognizing the value of protecting their patents and trade marks in China, many have failed to include Chinese domain names in their IP strategy. Cedric Lam of ...
China has pushed ahead with deploying Internet domain names written in Chinese as it urges action to standardize their use globally. China has solved most of the technical problems raised by ...
The domain name registration system in China was revamped in September 2002. Under the previous system, domain names were available only to companies that had a local presence, that is, a local ...
Icann will allow Web addresses to be expressed in Chinese characters, starting with government domains, but the change is unlikely to have any big immediate impact on the landscape of the Chinese ...
SGNIC, the domain name registry for Singapore, has announced the launch of second-level Chinese domain names. During Phase 2, which started on January 7 2010 and ends on February 18 2010, trademark ...
The Singapore Network Information Center (SGNIC) will begin registering Chinese-language domain names later this month, the Infocomm Development Authority of Singapore (IDA) said Tuesday. Despite its ...
A global Internet governing body last month approved new languages for use in domain names, but at least in China some Web sites have hesitated to rebrand into Chinese from their well-known names ...
A new Chinese domain name system, which will follow the international domain name system, will be in place by mid-2009. The new Chinese domain name system will hopefully reduce language barriers, ...
China has pushed ahead with deploying Internet domain names written in Chinese as it urges action to standardize their use globally. China has solved most of the technical problems raised by ...
From China Real Time Report: Icann will allow Web addresses to be expressed in Chinese characters, starting with government domains, but the change is unlikely to have any big immediate impact on the ...
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