ICANN Meeting This Week to Consider Non-Roman URL Characters

NEW YORK — The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) is moving closer to allowing non-Roman characters into URLs.

ICANN first tested the characters in 2007 by allowing webmasters to try out the non-Roman URLs with domains that ended in dot-test. Now the organization is planning to meet this week in Seoul, South Korea, to discuss the possibility of adding non-Roman characters to URLs.

According to online reports, characters from the following languages will be fair game under the new set-up: Arabic, Persian, Russian, Hindi, Greek, Korean, Hebrew, Japanese, Tamil, and both simplified and traditional Chinese. If all goes to plan, users should start seeing the new domains early next year.

"This is the biggest change technically to the internet since it was invented 40 years ago," ICANN chairman Peter Dengate Thrush said.

Although the addition of non-Roman characters to URLs might herald a more open era for the Internet, HotMovies Director of Marketing James Cybert told XBIZ that his company tried a similar tactic a few years ago when they bought about 50 domains that spelled common Japanese sexual slang terms in phonetic English.

"We gave it a shot, but the traffic was very limited," he said. "In the short term, how many end-users are going to know that they can type in those characters?"

In addition, spammers might be able to exploit this new option to buy phony domains that look like larger domains. For example, a phisher could simply add a non-Roman character to a common domain like Google.com and wind up with a web address that not only looks like Google at a glance, but that also has a dot-com ending.

Related:  

Copyright © 2026 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

Segpay Partners With Corey Silverstein for Legal Services

Segpay has partnered with adult industry attorney Corey D. Silverstein for specialized legal compliance and policy support for its merchant network.

AEBN Reveals Kasey Kei as Top Trans Star for Q2 of 2026

AEBN has named its top trans stars for the second quarter of 2026, with Kasey Kei landing atop the leaderboard.

Missouri Governor Signs Bill Making AV Regulations State Law

Missouri Governor Mike Kehoe signed a bill into law on Thursday requiring adult websites to age-verify users in the state, finalizing a legislative “stamp of approval” for AV rules after Missouri’s attorney general unilaterally imposed similar regulations last year.

Utherverse Launches 'Adult Game Fest' Virtual Convention

Virtual reality and metaverse technology company Utherverse is launching its inaugural Adult Game Fest convention and trade show, taking place Sept. 24-26.

Ofcom Fines Fapello $845,000 for AV Noncompliance

U.K. media regulator Ofcom on Thursday imposed a fine of 630,000 pounds (about $845,000) against adult website fapello.com for failing to comply with provisions of the Online Safety Act.

KiwiSourcing Joins Pineapple Support as Sponsor

Outsourcing and consulting firm KiwiSourcing has joined the ranks of over 70 adult businesses and organizations committing funds and resources to Pineapple Support.

AdultHTML Introduces AI-First Development Services

AdultHTML has introduced an AI-first development service, giving clients access to experienced software developers who use AI to streamline software development.

Texas Court Orders Adult Site Domain Locked for AV Violations

A district court in Texas has issued a writ requiring domain registry Verisign to “lock” an adult website’s domain over noncompliance with the state’s age verification law.

Adult Web Hosting Service 'QloudHost' Launches

QloudHost, a new web hosting service for adult websites, has launched.

Peter Hooke Launches New Paysite

Peter Hooke has launched an official website through PAYSITE.

Show More