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rfc:rfc6927

Independent Submission J. Levine Request for Comments: 6927 Taughannock Networks Category: Informational P. Hoffman ISSN: 2070-1721 VPN Consortium

                                                              May 2013
   Variants in Second-Level Names Registered in Top-Level Domains

Abstract

 Internationalized Domain Names for Applications (IDNA) provides a
 method to map a subset of names written in Unicode into the DNS.
 Because of Unicode decisions, appearance, language and writing system
 conventions, and historical reasons, it often has been asserted that
 there is more than one way to write what competent readers and
 writers think of as the same host name; these different ways of
 writing are often called "variants".  (The authors note that there
 are many conflicting definitions for the term "variant" in the IDNA
 community.)  This document surveys the approaches that top-level
 domains have taken to the registration and provisioning of domain
 names that have variants.  This document is not a product of the
 IETF, does not propose any method to make variants work "correctly",
 and is not an introduction to internationalization or IDNA.

Status of This Memo

 This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
 published for informational purposes.
 This is a contribution to the RFC Series, independently of any other
 RFC stream.  The RFC Editor has chosen to publish this document at
 its discretion and makes no statement about its value for
 implementation or deployment.  Documents approved for publication by
 the RFC Editor are not a candidate for any level of Internet
 Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 5741.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6927.

Levine & Hoffman Informational [Page 1] RFC 6927 Variants in Second-Level Domain Names May 2013

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2013 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
 document authors.  All rights reserved.
 This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
 Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
 (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
 publication of this document.  Please review these documents
 carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
 to this document.

Table of Contents

 1. Introduction ....................................................3
 2. Terminology .....................................................4
 3. Base Documents ..................................................5
 4. Domain Practices of gTLDs .......................................6
    4.1. AERO .......................................................6
    4.2. ASIA .......................................................6
    4.3. BIZ ........................................................6
    4.4. CAT ........................................................6
    4.5. COM ........................................................7
    4.6. COOP .......................................................7
    4.7. INFO .......................................................7
    4.8. JOBS .......................................................7
    4.9. MOBI .......................................................7
    4.10. MUSEUM ....................................................8
    4.11. NAME ......................................................8
    4.12. NET .......................................................8
    4.13. ORG .......................................................8
    4.14. POST ......................................................9
    4.15. PRO .......................................................9
    4.16. TEL .......................................................9
    4.17. TRAVEL ...................................................10
    4.18. XXX ......................................................10
 5. Domain Practices of ccTLDs .....................................10
    5.1. BG ........................................................10
    5.2. BR ........................................................10
    5.3. CL ........................................................10
    5.4. CN ........................................................10
    5.5. ES ........................................................11
    5.6. EU ........................................................11
    5.7. GR ........................................................11
    5.8. IL ........................................................11
    5.9. IR ........................................................11
    5.10. JP .......................................................11
    5.11. KR .......................................................12

Levine & Hoffman Informational [Page 2] RFC 6927 Variants in Second-Level Domain Names May 2013

    5.12. MY .......................................................12
    5.13. NZ .......................................................12
    5.14. PL .......................................................12
    5.15. RS .......................................................12
    5.16. RU .......................................................12
    5.17. SA .......................................................12
    5.18. SE .......................................................13
    5.19. TW .......................................................13
    5.20. UA .......................................................13
    5.21. VE .......................................................13
    5.22. XN--90A3AC ...............................................13
    5.23. XN--MGBERP4A5D4AR ........................................13
 6. Acknowledgements ...............................................13
 7. Security Considerations ........................................14
 8. Informative References .........................................14

1. Introduction

 Internationalized Domain Names for Applications (IDNA) [RFC5890]
 allows host names in the DNS [RFC1035] to contain characters from the
 Unicode repertoire.  Some Unicode characters are considered to be
 "variants" of one another.  Because of the 20th century reform of
 Chinese writing, there is often more than one representation of what
 Chinese speakers think of as the same character.  Some languages
 written in Latin characters with accents and diacritical marks, known
 as decorated characters, allow the decorations to be omitted in some
 situations; for example, French sometimes omits accents on capital
 letters, depending on country and culture.  Due to the difficulty of
 representing decorated characters in ASCII systems, many users have
 informally used undecorated characters in DNS host names, even when
 they are not linguistically equivalent to the decorated versions.
 There is no single agreed-on definition of "variant".  In 2012, ICANN
 said that variants "occur when a single conceptual character can be
 identified with two or more different Unicode Code Points with
 graphic representations that may be visually similar" (this
 definition was previously available at
 http://www.icann.org/en/resources/idn/variant-tlds).  ICANN's IDN
 Variant Issues Project report [VIPREPORT] says that "[t]here is today
 no fully accepted definition for what may constitute a variant
 relationship between top-level labels".  RFC 3743 [RFC3743] (an
 Informational RFC, not the product of the IETF) says that the idea of
 variants is "wherein one conceptual character can be identified with
 several different Code Points in character sets for computer use".
 The proper handing of variant names has been a topic of extensive
 debate and research, with little consensus reached on how to handle
 them or even what characters are variants of each other.  Many people

Levine & Hoffman Informational [Page 3] RFC 6927 Variants in Second-Level Domain Names May 2013

 would like variant names to behave "the same", for a diverse range of
 meanings of "same".  In some cases, it is a textual similarity, such
 as variants having corresponding DNS records; in some, it is
 functional similarity, such as variant names resolving to the same
 web server; while in others, it is user experience similarity, such
 as names resolving to web sites that, while not identical, are
 perceived by human users as equivalent.
 This document provides a snapshot of variant handling in the top-
 level domains (TLDs) contracted by ICANN, so-called gTLDs (generic
 TLDs) and sTLDs (sponsored TLDs), as of late 2012.  We chose those
 domains because ICANN requires each TLD to describe its IDN and
 variant practices, and the TLD zone files are available for
 inspection, to verify what actually goes into the zones.  This
 document also contains a small sampling of so-called ccTLDs (country
 code TLDs, the TLDs that consist of two ASCII letters) for which we
 could find information.
 Since "variant" can mean vastly different things to different people,
 there is also no agreement about when two zones are supposed to
 "behave the same".  Also, the gTLDs and sTLDs might have different
 views of what variants are and are not required to report to ICANN
 about their policies.

2. Terminology

 We use some terminology that has become generally agreed to when
 discussing variant names, although we openly admit that such
 agreement is not complete and the terminology continues to change.
 Bundle:  The IDN practices documents (see below) can identify sets of
    code points that are considered variants of each other using
    Language Variant Tables, defined in [RFC3743].  A set of names in
    which the characters in each position are variants is known as a
    bundle or, more technically, as an "IDL Package".  The variant
    rules vary among languages, and for the same language can vary
    among TLDs.  Many languages do not define variant characters and
    hence do not have bundles.
 Allocated:  A name is allocated if sponsorship of that label in some
    zone has been granted.  This is similar to what many people refer
    to as "registered".
 Active:  A name is active if it appears as an owner name in a zone.
    Most allocated names are active, but some are not.

Levine & Hoffman Informational [Page 4] RFC 6927 Variants in Second-Level Domain Names May 2013

 Blocked:  Some names cannot be registered at all.  For example, some
    registries allow one name in a bundle to be registered and block
    the rest.
 Withheld:  Some names can only be allocated under certain conditions.
    For example, some registries permit only the registrant of one
    name in a bundle to register or activate other names in the same
    bundle.
 Parallel NS:  Multiple names in a bundle are provisioned in the TLD
    with identical NS records, so they all are handled by the same
    name servers.
 DNAME aliasing:  The DNAME [RFC6672] DNS record creates a shadow tree
    of DNS records, roughly as though there were a CNAME in the shadow
    tree pointing to each name in the target tree.  DNAMEs have been
    used both to provide resolution for several names in a bundle and
    to provide resolution for every name under a TLD.

3. Base Documents

 ICANN has published a variety of documents on variant management.
 The most important are the "Guidelines for the Implementation of
 Internationalized Domain Names" issued in Version 1.0 [G1] and
 Version 3.0 [G3].
 ICANN says that TLDs are supposed to register an IDN practices
 document with IANA for each language and/or script in which the TLD
 accepts IDN registrations, to be entered in the IANA Repository of
 IDN Practices [IANAIDN].  The practices document lists the Unicode
 characters allowed in names in the language or script, which
 characters are considered equivalent, and which of an equivalent
 group is preferred.  Some TLDs have been more diligent than others at
 keeping the registry up to date.  Also, some TLDs have tables for a
 few languages and scripts, while others (notably .COM, .NET, and
 .NAME) have a large set of tables, including some for languages and
 scripts that are no longer spoken or used, such as Runic and Ogham.
 The authors also note that many of the tables in the IANA registry
 are clearly out of date, containing URLs of policy pages that no
 longer exist and contact information for people who have left the
 registry.
 Some of the ICANN agreements with each TLD [ICANNAGREE] describe the
 TLD's IDN practices, but most don't.

Levine & Hoffman Informational [Page 5] RFC 6927 Variants in Second-Level Domain Names May 2013

4. Domain Practices of gTLDs

 This list covers most of the current set of gTLDs.  In most cases,
 the authors have also checked the zone files for the gTLD to verify
 or augment the policy description.

4.1. AERO

 The .AERO TLD has no IDNs and no rules or practices for them.

4.2. ASIA

 The .ASIA domain accepts registrations in many Asian languages.  They
 have IANA tables for Japanese, Korean, and Chinese.  The IANA tables
 refer to their CJK IDN policies [ASIACJK], which say that applied-for
 and preferred IDN variants are "active and included in the zone".  No
 IDN publication mechanism is described in the documentation, but
 since the zone file contains no DNAMEs, they must be using parallel
 NS for variants.

4.3. BIZ

 ICANN gave the registry (Neustar) non-specific permission to register
 IDNs in a letter in 2004 [TWOMEY04A].  The IDN rules were apparently
 discussed with ICANN but not defined; see Appendix 9 of the registry
 agreement [ICANNBIZ9].
 They have about a dozen IANA tables.  No IDN publication mechanism is
 described, but from inspection, it appears that variants are blocked.

4.4. CAT

 The IDN rules are described in Appendix S, Part VII.2 [ICANNCATS] of
 the ICANN agreement.  "Registry will take a very cautious approach in
 its IDN offerings.  IDNs will be bundled with the equivalent ASCII
 domains".  The only language is Catalan.  No IDN publication
 mechanism is described.
 Appendix S includes "The list of non-ASCII-characters for Catalan
 language and their ASCII equivalent for the purposes of the defined
 service", which implicitly describes bundles.  The bundles consist of
 names with accented and unaccented vowels, U+00E7 ("c with cedilla")
 and a plain c, and the Catalan "ela geminada" written as two l's
 separated by a U+00B7 ("middle dot") and the three characters "l-l".

Levine & Hoffman Informational [Page 6] RFC 6927 Variants in Second-Level Domain Names May 2013

 When a registrant registers an IDN, the registry also includes the
 ASCII version.  From inspection of the zone file, the ASCII version
 is provisioned with NS, and the IDN is a DNAME alias of the ASCII
 version.

4.5. COM

 ICANN and Verisign have extensive correspondence about IDNs and
 variants, including letters to ICANN from Ben Turner [TURNER03] and
 Russell Lewis [LEWIS03].
 The IANA registry has tables for several dozen languages, including
 archaic languages such as hieroglyphics and Aramaic.  Verisign
 publishes documents describing scripts and languages [VRSNLANG],
 character variants [VRSNCHAR], registration rules [VRSNRULES], and
 additional registration logic [VRSNADDL].
 In Chinese, variants are blocked (see [VRSNADDL]).  In other
 languages, there is no bundling or blocking.

4.6. COOP

 The .COOP TLD has no IDNs and no rules or practices for them.

4.7. INFO

 The IANA registry has a table for German.  The German table notes
 that "the Eszet ... character used in the German script will be
 mapped to a double 's' string (i.e. 'ss')".  The domain also offers
 names in Greek, Russian, Arabic, Korean, and other languages.  The
 list and IDN tables are on the registry's web site [INFOTABLES].
 Afilias says (not in a published policy) that it does not allow
 Korean characters with different widths and that there are no
 variants in .INFO.
 Appendix 9 of the registry agreement [ICANNINFO9] refers to a 2003
 letter from Paul Twomey [TWOMEY03] that refers to blocking variants.

4.8. JOBS

 The .JOBS TLD has no IDNs and no rules or practices for them.

4.9. MOBI

 The zone file has about 22,000 IDNs.  Afilias says (not in a
 published policy) that .MOBI supports Simplified Chinese only and
 that the language table for this is the same as that used by .CN.

Levine & Hoffman Informational [Page 7] RFC 6927 Variants in Second-Level Domain Names May 2013

 Variant characters are blocked from registration.  The domain has no
 tables at IANA.  Appendix S of the registry agreement [ICANNMOBIS],
 says that IDNs are provisioned according to [G1].

4.10. MUSEUM

 The zone file has many IDNs, but spot checks find that many are lame
 or dead.  A 2004 letter from Paul Twomey [TWOMEY04] refers to [G1].
 The registry has a detailed policy page [MUSEUMPOLICY].  IDNs are
 accepted in Latin and Hebrew scripts, with plans for Arabic, Chinese,
 Japanese, Korean, Cyrillic, and Greek.  They do no bundling or
 blocking, but names that may be confusable due to visual similarity
 are not allowed.  These are apparently determined by manual
 inspection, which is practical due to the very small size of the
 domain.

4.11. NAME

 The .NAME TLD is managed the same as .COM.

4.12. NET

 The .NET TLD is managed the same as .COM.

4.13. ORG

 A 2003 letter from Paul Twomey [TWOMEY03A] refers to [G1].  The
 registry has a list of IDN languages [PIRIDN], several written in
 Latin script, plus Chinese and Korean.  A Questions page [PIRFAQ]
 states that Chinese names have been accepted since January 2010 and
 Cyrillic names in seven languages since February 2011.  The practices
 for some, but not all, of the Latin languages are registered with
 IANA.
 A Chinese language policy form on the Public Interest Registry (PIR)
 web site says that the ZH-CN and ZH-TW IDNs use the corresponding
 ccTLD tables from IANA, and check boxes say that Variant Registration
 Polices and Variant Management Policies are applicable but don't say
 what those policies are.
 Private correspondence [CHANDIWALA12] describes not-yet-public rules
 for variants in Chinese and Cyrillic in .ORG that restrict the number
 of variants that a registration can have.
 The Korean language policy form says that it uses the KRNIC table for
 Korean from IANA and that there are no variants.

Levine & Hoffman Informational [Page 8] RFC 6927 Variants in Second-Level Domain Names May 2013

4.14. POST

 The .POST TLD appears to have no registrations at all yet.

4.15. PRO

 The .PRO TLD has no IDNs and no rules or practices for them.

4.16. TEL

 The zone has many IDNs.  It is probably operating according to a 2004
 letter from Paul Twomey [TWOMEY04A] to Neustar, which did not mention
 specific TLDs.  Its policy page [TELPOLICY] has links to IDN
 practices for 17 languages, all but one of which are registered with
 IANA.  None of the Latin scripts do bundling or blocking.  The
 Japanese practices say that variants are blocked.  The Chinese
 practices document says:
    Therefore, in addition to the blocking mechanism, bundling is also
    implemented for the Chinese language IDNs.  When registering a
    Chinese language IDN (primary domain name) up to two additional
    variant domain names will be automatically registered.  The first
    variant will consist entirely of simplified Chinese characters
    that correspond to those comprising the primary domain name.  The
    second variant will consist exclusively of traditional Chinese
    characters that correspond to those comprising the primary domain
    name.
    The primary domain name together with the requested variants
    constitutes a bundle on which all operations are atomic.  For
    example, if the registrant adds a name server to the primary
    domain name, all names in the bundle will be associated with that
    new name server.
 The zone has no DNAME records, so the second paragraph strongly
 suggests parallel NS.
 The .TEL TLD, intended as an online directory, does not allow
 registrants to enter arbitrary Resource Records (RRs) in the zone.
 Nearly all names have NS records pointing to Telnic's own name
 servers.  The A records all point to Telnic's own web server that
 shows directory information.  NAPTR records provide telephone numbers
 of registrants if available.  Users can only directly provision MX
 records.  Currently, there are 16 domains, none of which are IDNs,
 that point to random other name servers and mostly appear to be
 parked.

Levine & Hoffman Informational [Page 9] RFC 6927 Variants in Second-Level Domain Names May 2013

4.17. TRAVEL

 The .TRAVEL TLD has no IDNs and no rules or practices for them.

4.18. XXX

 The .XXX TLD has no IDNs and no rules or practices for them.

5. Domain Practices of ccTLDs

 Some ccTLDs publish their IDN policies.  This section is a non-
 exhaustive sampling of some of those policies.  Note that few ccTLDs
 make their zone files available, so the authors could not validate
 the policies by looking in the zone files.

5.1. BG

 The .BG TLD (for Bulgaria) publishes a policy page [BGPOLICY].  It
 has published an IDN table for the Bulgarian and Russian languages in
 [IANAIDN].  The policy does not mention variants.

5.2. BR

 The .BR TLD (for Brazil) publishes a policy page [BRPOLICY].  It has
 published an IDN table for the Portuguese language in [IANAIDN].
 Although the IDN table does not describe variants, the policy page
 says that bundles consist of names that are the same disregarding
 accents on vowels, cedillas on letter "c", and inserted or deleted
 hyphens.  Only the registrant of a name in a bundle can register
 other names from the same bundle.

5.3. CL

 The .CL TLD (for Chile) publishes a policy page [CLPOLICY].  It has
 published an IDN table for the Latin script in [IANAIDN].  The policy
 says that variants are not considered for registration.

5.4. CN

 The .CN TLD (for China) publishes its policy as [RFC4713].  It has
 published an IDN table for the Chinese language in [IANAIDN].  The
 policy says that variants are "added into the zone file", presumably
 as NS records.

Levine & Hoffman Informational [Page 10] RFC 6927 Variants in Second-Level Domain Names May 2013

5.5. ES

 The .ES TLD (for Spain) publishes an IDN Area page [ESIDN].  It
 allows ten accented vowels, U+00E7 ("c with cedilla"), U+00F1 ("n
 with tilde"), and the Catalan "ela geminada" written as two l's
 separated by a U+00B7 ("middle dot").  There are no published IDN
 tables, and there appears to be no variant policy.

5.6. EU

 The .EU TLD (for Europe) publishes a policy page [EUPOLICY].  It has
 published IDN tables for three scripts in [IANAIDN].  There appears
 to be no variant policy.

5.7. GR

 The .GR TLD (for Greece) publishes a policy page [GRPOLICY] and an
 FAQ [GRFAQ].  The policy says that all variants of a name under .GR
 are assigned to the domain owner, with the zone pointing the NS
 records of all the variants to the name server of the "main form" of
 the registered name.  The FAQ says that domain names in Greek
 characters are inserted in the zone using their non-punctuated form
 in Punycode and that the punctuated form is associated with the non-
 punctuated with a DNAME record.  It does not publish IDN tables in
 [IANAIDN].

5.8. IL

 The .IL TLD (for Israel) publishes a policy page [ILPOLICY].  It has
 published an IDN table for the Hebrew language in [IANAIDN].  There
 is no variant policy.

5.9. IR

 The .IR TLD (for Iran) publishes a policy page [IRPOLICY].  It has
 published an IDN table for the Persian language in [IANAIDN].  The
 IDN table says that it will block registration of variants.  However,
 the policy document says that no IDNs can be registered in .IR.

5.10. JP

 The .JP TLD (for Japan) publishes a policy page [JPPOLICY].  It has
 published an IDN table for the Japanese language in [IANAIDN].  Each
 code point in that table defines no variants, which means there are
 no variants in registration or resolution.

Levine & Hoffman Informational [Page 11] RFC 6927 Variants in Second-Level Domain Names May 2013

5.11. KR

 The .KR TLD (for South Korea) appears to only publish its policy as
 an IDN table for the Korean language in [IANAIDN].  The policy in
 that table does not discuss variants.

5.12. MY

 The .MY TLD (for Malaysia) appears to only publish its policy as an
 IDN table for the Jawi language in [IANAIDN]; however, IANA lists
 that as a table for "Malay (macrolanguage)".  The policy in that
 table does not discuss variants.

5.13. NZ

 The .NZ TLD (for New Zealand) publishes a policy page [NZPOLICY].  It
 has published IDN tables for the Latin script in [IANAIDN].  The
 policy does not discuss variants.

5.14. PL

 The .PL TLD (for Poland) publishes a policy page [PLPOLICY].  It has
 published IDN tables for numerous European languages in [IANAIDN].
 The policy says that it will block registration of "look-alike"
 variants.

5.15. RS

 The .RS TLD (for Serbia) publishes a policy page [RSPOLICY].  It has
 published IDN tables for the Serbian language, and the Latin script,
 in [IANAIDN].  The policy does not discuss variants.

5.16. RU

 The .RU TLD (for Russia) appears to only publish its policy as an IDN
 table for the Russian language in [IANAIDN].  The policy in that
 table does not discuss variants.

5.17. SA

 The .SA TLD (for Saudi Arabia) publishes a policy page [SAPOLICY].
 It has published an IDN table for the Arabic language in [IANAIDN].
 The policy permits the registration of variants, but it is not clear
 whether others can register names with variants if the owner of a
 name has not registered them.

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5.18. SE

 The .SE TLD (for Sweden) publishes a policy page [SEPOLICY].  It has
 published IDN tables for the Swedish and Yiddish languages, and the
 Latin script, in [IANAIDN].  The policy does not discuss variants.

5.19. TW

 The .TW TLD (for Taiwan) appears to only publish its policy as an IDN
 table for the Chinese language in [IANAIDN].  The policy in that
 table does not discuss variants.

5.20. UA

 The .UA TLD (for Ukraine) publishes a policy page [UAPOLICY].  It has
 published an IDN table for the Cyrillic script in [IANAIDN].  The
 policy does not discuss variants.

5.21. VE

 The .VE TLD (for Venezuela) appears to only publish its policy as an
 IDN table for the Spanish language in [IANAIDN].  The policy in that
 table does not discuss variants.

5.22. XN–90A3AC

 The .XN--90A3AC TLD (for Serbia) (U+0441 U+0440 U+0431) publishes a
 policy page [RSIDNPOLICY].  It has published IDN tables for the
 Cyrillic script in [IANAIDN].  The policy does not discuss variants.

5.23. XN–MGBERP4A5D4AR

 The .XN--MGBERP4A5D4AR TLD (for Saudi Arabia) (U+0627 U+0644 U+0633
 U+0639 U+0648 U+062F U+064A U+0629) appears to only publish its
 policy as an IDN table for the Arabic script in [IANAIDN].  The
 policy permits the registration of variants, but it is not clear
 whether others can register names with variants if the owner of a
 name has not registered them.

6. Acknowledgements

 Many people contributed to this document, particularly Nacho Amadoz,
 Marc Blanchet, Michelle Coon, Jordi Iparraguirre, Frederico A. C.
 Neves, Vaggelis Segredakis, Doron Shikmoni, Andrew Sullivan, Dennis
 Tan, and Joseph Yee.

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7. Security Considerations

 There are many potential security considerations for various methods
 of dealing with IDN variants.  However, this document is only a
 catalog of current variant policies and does not address whether they
 are good or bad ideas from a security standpoint.  The documents
 cited in the Terminology section have a little discussion of security
 considerations for IDN variants.

8. Informative References

 [ASIACJK]    Dot.Asia Organisation, ".ASIA CJK (Chinese Japanese
              Korean) IDN Policies", May 2011,
              <http://dot.asia/policies/
              DotAsia-CJK-IDN-Policies-COMPLETE--2011-05-04.pdf>.
 [BGPOLICY]   Register.BG, "Terms and Conditions for Domain Name
              Registration and Support in the .BG Zone and the Sub-
              Zones", August 2011, <https://www.register.bg/user/
              static/rules/en/index.html>.
 [BRPOLICY]   Registro.br, "Dominios .br", September 2011,
              <http://registro.br/dominio/regras.html>.
 [CHANDIWALA12]
              Chandiwala, S., "Letter from Sadik Chandiwala to John
              Levine", December 2012.
 [CLPOLICY]   NIC Chile, "Syntax Rules for Domain Names under .CL",
              August 2005, <http://www.nic.cl/CL-IDN-policy.html>.
 [ESIDN]      Red.es, "IDN area", <http://www.dominios.es/dominios/
              en/todo-lo-que-necesitas-saber/valores-anadidos/
              area-idn>.
 [EUPOLICY]   EURid, ".eu Domain Name Registration Terms and
              Conditions", <http://link.eurid.eu/trm-con>.
 [G1]         ICANN, "Guidelines for the Implementation of
              Internationalized Domain Names, Version 1.0",
              <http://www.icann.org/en/resources/idn/
              idn-guidelines-20jun03-en.htm>.
 [G3]         ICANN, "Guidelines for the Implementation of
              Internationalized Domain Names, Version 3.0",
              <http://www.icann.org/en/resources/idn/
              idn-guidelines-02sep11-en.htm>.

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 [GRFAQ]      Foundation for Research and Technology - Hellas,
              "Frequently Asked Questions regarding [.gr] Domain Name
              registrations",
              <https://grweb.ics.forth.gr/faq.jsp?lang=en>.
 [GRPOLICY]   Foundation for Research and Technology - Hellas,
              "Regulation on Management and Assignment of [.gr] Domain
              Names", 2011, <https://grweb.ics.forth.gr/tomcat_docs/
              AP592_012_2011_.pdf>.
 [IANAIDN]    IANA, "Repository of IDN Practices",
              <http://www.iana.org/domains/idn-tables>.
 [ICANNAGREE] ICANN, "ICANN Registry Agreements",
              <http://www.icann.org/en/about/agreements/registries>.
 [ICANNBIZ9]  ICANN, "Appendix 9 of ICANN .BIZ Registry Agreement",
              December 2006, <http://www.icann.org/en/about/
              agreements/registries/biz/appendix-09-08dec06-en.htm>.
 [ICANNCATS]  ICANN, "Appendix S of ICANN .CAT Registry Agreement",
              March 2006, <http://www.icann.org/en/about/agreements/
              registries/cat/cat-appendixs-22mar06-en.htm>.
 [ICANNINFO9] ICANN, "Appendix 9 of ICANN .INFO Registry Agreement",
              December 2006, <http://www.icann.org/en/tlds/agreements/
              info/appendix-09-08dec06.htm>.
 [ICANNMOBIS] ICANN, "Appendix S of ICANN .MOBI Registry Agreement",
              November 2005,
              <http://www.icann.org/en/about/agreements/
              registries/mobi/mobi-appendixs-23nov05-en.htm>.
 [ILPOLICY]   Israel Internet Association (ISOC-IL), "Rules for the
              Allocation of Domain Names Under the Israel Country Code
              Top Level Domain ("IL ")", August 2010,
              <http://www.isoc.org.il/domains/il-domain-rules.html>.
 [INFOTABLES] Afilias, "Internationalized Domain Names",
              <http://info.info/information/
              internationalized-domain-names>.
 [IRPOLICY]   IPM/IRNIC, "Internationalized Domain Names in .IR",
              <http://www.nic.ir/Internationalized_Domain_Names>.
 [JPPOLICY]   JPRS, "Technology bylaws regarding generic domain name
              registration JP",
              <http://jprs.jp/doc/rule/saisoku-1-wideusejp.html>.

Levine & Hoffman Informational [Page 15] RFC 6927 Variants in Second-Level Domain Names May 2013

 [LEWIS03]    Lewis, R., "Letter from Russell Lewis to Paul Twomey",
              October 2003, <http://www.icann.org/en/news/
              correspondence/lewis-to-twomey-13oct03-en.htm>.
 [MUSEUMPOLICY]
              MuseDoma, "Internationalized Domain Names (IDN) in
              .museum - Policies and terms of use", January 2009,
              <http://about.museum/idn/idnpolicy.html>.
 [NZPOLICY]   .nz Registry Services, "Internationalised Domain Names
              (IDN)", <http://nzrs.net.nz/dns/idn>.
 [PIRFAQ]     Public Interest Registry, "Internationalized Domain Name
              (IDN) Questions", <http://www.pir.org/why/global/idn>.
 [PIRIDN]     Public Interest Registry, "Go Global",
              <http://www.pir.org/why/global>.
 [PLPOLICY]   NASK (PL-TLD), "Registering Internationalized Domain
              Names under .PL", July 2007,
              <http://www.dns.pl/IDN/idn-registration-policy.txt>.
 [RFC1035]    Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - implementation and
              specification", STD 13, RFC 1035, November 1987.
 [RFC3743]    Konishi, K., Huang, K., Qian, H., and Y. Ko, "Joint
              Engineering Team (JET) Guidelines for Internationalized
              Domain Names (IDN) Registration and Administration for
              Chinese, Japanese, and Korean", RFC 3743, April 2004.
 [RFC4713]    Lee, X., Mao, W., Chen, E., Hsu, N., and J. Klensin,
              "Registration and Administration Recommendations for
              Chinese Domain Names", RFC 4713, October 2006.
 [RFC5890]    Klensin, J., "Internationalized Domain Names for
              Applications (IDNA): Definitions and Document
              Framework", RFC 5890, August 2010.
 [RFC6672]    Rose, S. and W. Wijngaards, "DNAME Redirection in the
              DNS", RFC 6672, June 2012.
 [RSIDNPOLICY]
              RNIDS, "Internationalized Domain Names (IDN) in
              xn--90a3ac ccTLD", October 2011, <http://www.rnids.rs/
              data/DOKUMENTI/idn-srb-policy-termsofuse-v1.4-eng.pdf>.

Levine & Hoffman Informational [Page 16] RFC 6927 Variants in Second-Level Domain Names May 2013

 [RSPOLICY]   RNIDS, "General Terms And Conditions For Registration of
              .rs Domain Names", June 2009, <http://www.rnids.rs/
              data/DOKUMENTI/Opsti%20akti/list0029_en.pdf>.
 [SAPOLICY]   Saudi Network Information Center, "Saudi Domain Name
              Registration Regulation", March 2011,
              <http://nic.sa/docs/
              Saudi_Domain_Name_Registration_Regulation_V3.0_EN.pdf>.
 [SEPOLICY]   .SE (The Internet Infrastructure Foundation), "Domain
              names (IDN)",
              <https://www.iis.se/english/register/idn/>.
 [TELPOLICY]  Telnic, ".TEL Policies",
              <http://www.telnic.org/policies.html>.
 [TURNER03]   Turner, B., "Letter from Ben Turner to Paul Twomey",
              November 2003, <http://www.icann.org/en/news/
              correspondence/turner-to-twomey-17nov03-en.htm>.
 [TWOMEY03]   Twomey, P., "Letter from Paul Twomey to Ram Mohan",
              August 2003, <http://www.icann.org/en/news/
              correspondence/twomey-to-mohan-19aug03-en.htm>.
 [TWOMEY03A]  Twomey, P., "Letter from Paul Twomey to Edward Viltz",
              October 2003, <http://www.icann.org/en/news/
              correspondence/twomey-to-viltz-21oct03-en.htm>.
 [TWOMEY04]   Twomey, P., "Letter from Paul Twomey to Cary Karp",
              January 2004, <http://www.icann.org/en/news/
              correspondence/twomey-to-karp-20jan04-en.htm>.
 [TWOMEY04A]  Twomey, P., "Letter from Paul Twomey to Richard Tindal",
              July 2004, <http://www.icann.org/en/correspondence/
              twomey-to-tindal-29jul04.pdf>.
 [UAPOLICY]   UA ccTLD, "Registration Schedule of IDN-domains",
              <http://www.hostmaster.ua/idn/>.
 [VIPREPORT]  ICANN, "A Study of Issues Related to the Management of
              IDN Variant TLDs (Integrated Issues Report)",
              <http://www.icann.org/en/topics/idn/
              idn-vip-integrated-issues-final-clean-20feb12-en.pdf>.
 [VRSNADDL]   Verisign, "Additional Logic",
              <http://www.verisigninc.com/en_US/products-and-services/
              domain-name-services/domain-information-center/
              idn-code-points/additional-logic/index.xhtml>.

Levine & Hoffman Informational [Page 17] RFC 6927 Variants in Second-Level Domain Names May 2013

 [VRSNCHAR]   Verisign, "Character Variants",
              <http://www.verisigninc.com/en_US/products-and-services/
              domain-name-services/domain-information-center/
              idn-resources/character-variants/index.xhtml>.
 [VRSNLANG]   Verisign, "Scripts and Languages",
              <http://www.verisigninc.com/en_US/products-and-services/
              domain-name-services/domain-information-center/
              idn-resources/scripts-languages/index.xhtml>.
 [VRSNRULES]  Verisign, "Registration Rules",
              <http://www.verisigninc.com/en_US/products-and-services/
              domain-name-services/domain-information-center/
              idn-code-points/registration-rules/index.xhtml>.

Authors' Addresses

 John Levine
 Taughannock Networks
 EMail: standards@taugh.com
 Paul Hoffman
 VPN Consortium
 EMail: paul.hoffman@vpnc.org

Levine & Hoffman Informational [Page 18]

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