 |
Registrar Connections
|
March 2007
In this issue:
.jobs: Providing HR a Solution

|
A recent study found that 71% of job
seekers rely on the Internet to search for jobs. As a result,
U.S. organizations spent over 57% of their budget on Internet sources.
A full 15% of the budget is spent on the organization’s Web site alone.
But are they getting the appropriate return on their investment?
|
Candidates can only recognize the value of a site
if they actually get to it. But in most cases, the recruitment
section of a company’s Web site is three or more “clicks” away from
the home page. It is difficult for recruiters to drive traffic
to a site when the URL is long and complicated, for example: www.CompanyName.com/aboutus/mission/careers. As a result,
only 5% of job hunters reported receiving a job as a result of an ad
on the company’s web site.
Although organizations are investing in their recruitment
portals or sites, job seekers are not getting to these sites.
This represents a great opportunity to offer the recruiting community
a simple but effective solution, .jobs. With .jobs, candidates know where to go and what
to expect when they get there. There is no need for messaging because
.jobs says it all.
Look how one industry leader is effectively using
their .jobs name:
“Merck is a global
pharmaceutical and chemical company with 177 companies in 56 countries.
We decided to register merck.jobs for several reasons. As a general policy we try
to register our name and trademark MERCK in a large number of countries.
For the internet we decided to register merck.TLD wherever appropriate.
But each company had their own system for recruiting people. Prior to
the introduction of the .jobs domain we decided to establish a worldwide job portal
offering jobs in the different companies. Now, www.merck.jobs is the perfect domain name to host the worldwide
job portal of Merck.” Jonas Kölle - Rechtsanwalt / Legal Counsel - Merck KGaA, Corporate
Legal & Intellectual Property / Trademarks
|

|
For more information, send an email to namingmarketing@verisign.com.
And check out the .jobs marketing tools at www.verisign.com/jobsmarketing.
Source: eMarketer, Career Planning and Job Hunting Online, December 2006
Back
to top
A New Registrar Tool is Now
Available!
Did you know that the Internet Profile Service is
now immediately available to all registrars?
What is the Internet Profile Service?
The Internet Profile Service is a scalable approach
to maintain an up-to-date categorization and classification of new and
existing Web sites on a scheduled monthly basis.
Improve your target marketing efforts!

|
There are over 120M domain names world
wide and it is key that registrars better identify for what purpose
registrants and their resellers are registering domain names. The Internet
Profile Service’s objective is to build a holistic view of your online
activity by industry segment to increase your understanding of your
online environment and to complement your own existing micro-analysis
Web analytics tools. This service will also determine trends in overall
Web site activity without the “noise” and will allow you to manage your
resellers and retail customers more effectively. The Internet Profile
Service has also recently expanded to include the categorization of
blog sites.
|
Why should you choose VeriSign for this Service?
VeriSign uniquely
positioned to understand domain behaviors and is widely viewed to be
a go to source for domain related behavioral content with our visibility
into the entire .com, .net, .cc and .tv domain name landscape. Leveraging
the Internet Profile Service with its large scale ability to categorize
and classify domains registrars can now take advantage of this paid
service and enroll in this new service offering.
|

|
Take this opportunity now to enroll in the Internet Profile Service
program!
For more information and a demo, contact Customer
Service or Lenn Orentas, the Internet Profile Service product manager
at lorentas@verisign.com.
Back
to top
VeriSign Partner Logo

|
VeriSign’s Domain Name Suggestion
Service provides registrars a quick and easy solution to generate significantly
more domain name registrations. Released into General Availability
on December 1, the service’s beta customers have experienced a significant
increase in new registrations directly attributable to the Domain Name
Suggestion Service. The implementation effort is simple and the
service is completely free!
|
The Domain Name Suggestion Service is the perfect
solution for any Product Manager looking for an easy, cost-effective
way to generate additional domain name registrations. Visit our Web
Site at http://www.verisign.com/domainnamesuggestion
or send an email to info@verisign-grs.com
to learn more about Domain Name Suggestion Service and get access to
our Web-based product demo.
Back
to top
.com/.net Software Release
Scheduled for April
We are re-issuing
the notice from last month’s newsletter to respond to some of our registrars
who have been asking us about the key dates for the .com/.net software
release.
|

|
Registrar's Com/Net Accounts will be merged with the
Name Store Registrar Account during the scheduled maintenance on April
28, 2007. The OT&E maintenance is scheduled for March 27, 2007. We
would encourage all Com/Net Registrars to connect to the Com/Net OT&E
environment to regression test your applications following the March
27th OT&E Maintenance. For those registrars also in the Name Store
we would further encourage you to also test in the Name Store OT&E
Environment following the March 27th Maintenance.
What this means: This new release will help you manage
your finances better because you only need one financial account to
manage the different Registry activities.
In addition to the account updates previously announced
and summarized below, the XML parser will also be updated. The updated
parser will result in an EPP 2001 “Command syntax error” when passing
both a date and time (2007-04-03T22:00:00.0Z) in the <domain:curExpDate>
element of a domain renew.
With these updates in addition to the account updates
it is important that all registrars connect to OT&E in order to test
your client application following the OT&E software release on March
27, 2007.
Account Updates include:
- The Com/Net and Name Store financial accounts will
be consolidated into one account that is managed through the Name Store
System. This means one account, and one account balance to manage all
of your products.
- The same login and password will be used to access
both the Com/Net and Name Store EPP systems.
- The Com/Net Registrar Tool will be decommissioned
and Registrars will use the Name Store Manager Tool to manage account
information, review your financial balance, and use as a GUI interface
to administer your domain and name server related information for the
Com/Net and Name Store products.
- Introduction of a Registrar Tool in Com/Net OT&E environment.
The Name Store Manager OT&E Tool will be updated with the Com/Net
products and will also migrate all Com/Net OT&E account information
into the Name Store during the OT&E release scheduled for March 27,
2007.
If you missed the Webinars and have questions or need
additional information, please send an email to namingMarketing@verisign.com.
Back
to top
Guess Who Made Fortune’s ‘Most
Admired Companies in America’ List?
Fortune published its 25th annual ‘America’s Most
Admired Companies’ report this month and VeriSign made the list. A total
of 306 top companies were rated in eight different key areas. In the
‘Information Tech Services’ category, VeriSign came in at number 5,
marking its debut on the list as well its image as one the industry’s
leading companies.
The Most Admired List is an annual report card of leading corporations
that are judged via survey by other peer companies to measure performance
and reputation. To see the full list, read the article in Fortune
. For more information, read the press release on the VeriSign company Web
site .
Back
to top
VeriSign Naming Services Staff
Spotlight: W.S.
Our registrars have
been working closely with this VeriSign “old-timer” back when he was
a supervisor in the Customer Service team handling our 24x7 on-call
escalation support. He has changed jobs since, and as of late last year
transitioned to the product management team for .com and .net.

|
William (better known as “Will”) Shorter
joined VeriSign in January 2001 as a customer service representative
for the .com/.net Domain Name Registry. He spent many indeterminable
hours learning and understanding the complexities of DNS, the Shared
Registration System and IDNs, until he could speak it forward and backward
with equal ease.
|
Curiously, Will also exhibits the same relentless
passion he shows with his work, on his other interests, namely sports.
Whenever Will finally decides to leave the office at the end of each
day, he recharges his internal batteries by going straight to the outdoors
to practice flag football, or play kickball, or softball, or tennis,
or basketball, or golf. And later this spring, his kickball team "Gonzo",
will be attending the World Adult Kickball Association championship in
Boston, Massachusetts in a serious attempt to de-throne the perennial
champions, "The Kick Asphalts". He concedes that we
could label him a sports ‘junkie’ and admits that he is looking forward
to hiking part of the Appalachian Trail this summer. Then, during
those rare free moments he gets, Will also loves cooking outdoors –
that’s barbecuing on the grill and making homemade beef jerky for his
friends and family.
What does Will think about his years at VeriSign?
“I enjoy being at VeriSign because of the talented people I am able
to work with, learn from, and create friendships with while helping
to operate one of the key pieces of the Internet's Infrastructure.”
Back
to top
Customer Service:
Frequently Asked Questions
This section includes some recent questions handled
by the Customer Service group.
Question: When the logon name is replaced by the GURID for
transfer notification emails and poll messages, where can I find a list
of GURIDs.
Answer: ICANN stores this information on their site at the
URL below.
http://www.iana.org/assignments/registrar-ids
Question: Why can't I connect to the COM/NET OT&E environment
and the NameStore OT&E environments?
Answer: On Monday, 3/5/07, we changed the IP address of the
COM/NET OT&E host name from 65.199.34.140 to 72.13.44.22. Please
ensure you are connecting to the OTE server epp-ote.verisign-grs.com
and not the old IP address.
Also, the NameStore OT&E IP was changed. Please
ensure you are connecting to the server names below and not the IP's.
NameStore OT&E server:
otehttps.verisign-grs.com
otessl.verisign-grs.com
Back
to top
Special Report on Technology
from eMarketer: U.S. Online Advertising Spending

|
Having grown by more than 30% in each
of the last three years, online ad spending in the U.S. is set to rise
by less than 19% in 2007. Lower annual growth rates are mathematically
inevitable for any growing market; as total spending increases, each
new dollar represents a smaller percentage of the total. At the same
time, the widely expected fall in U.S. economic growth will have the
very real effect of constraining advertising budgets in 2007. Nonetheless,
online ad spending growth in 2007 of 18.9% will far surpass the levels
seen in the other major media. Furthermore, while online video advertising
will eventually contribute far greater sums to the Internet totals,
significant enough levels of spending will not occur for several years.
|
However, 2008 will see a spending bounce back, supported
by the U.S. presidential elections and the Summer Olympics, with slowing
but still strong growth from 2009 through 2011.
Overall, 2007–2011 will show much slower growth than
2004–2006, reflecting a maturing market and a degree of weakness in
the U.S. economy. The expected weakness is generally attributed to the
still-increasing federal budget deficit, the sharp imbalance of foreign
trade and the associated softness of the U.S. dollar.
While virtually all researchers expect online ad spending
to increase each year through 2011, five firms—Borrell Associates, Forrester
Research, JupiterResearch, Oppenheimer and PricewaterhouseCoopers—see
positive annual growth slipping into single figures for the first time
since the dawn of Internet advertising in the 1990s (apart from 2001
and 2002, when online ad spending fell by 11.8% and 15.8%, respectively).
The perspective from
eMarketer is more bullish, projecting annual growth falling to 13.0%
by the end of 2011. Three unique characteristics of the Internet support
that view:
1) Even if the economy slows down, continued growth
in the online audience and the need for advertising to follow that audience
will drive an ongoing shift away from other media, most notably newspapers
and radio
2) The opportunities for better targeting and more
accurate tracking offered by online advertising relative to other media
makes spending on the Internet even more appealing in a soft economy
3) As online video advertising becomes more widely
used, large brand marketers who have up to now only dipped their toes
online will devote increasingly greater budget shares to the Internet
|

|
To read the full report, please contact eMarketer’s
Jennifer Moore at 212.763.6046 or jmoore@emarketer.com.
Back
to top
In the News
This section contains a selection of articles pertaining
to the Domain Name Industry compiled by Information, Inc.
"Web Site Owners May Get Tougher to Find"
National Law Journal (03/01/07) Marek, Lynne
ICANN this year may approve a policy proposal to enable domain name
owners to mask their contact information available to the public, and
for instance allow them to substitute the contact information of a go-between
entity. ICANN plans to consider a report on the issue in March 2007,
and may vote on it as early as June 2007, according to one lawyer working
on the policy. ICANN council member and Tucows director of retail services
Ross Rader is working with others to forge a policy recommendation for
the ICANN board, and Rader says any solution will take a phased-in approach.
If a masking policy is adopted, trademark owners and their lawyers may
find it harder to track down domain name owners infringing on their
trademarks. On the other hand, consumers and privacy advocates argue
that domain name owners need to be able to shield their private information
from invasive online openness. ICANN likely will consider only these
three options: leave WhoIs policy as is; require domain name owners
to display their name and country only, with any additional information
optional; or enable domain name owners to shield contact information
only if there exists a threat to their personal safety. ICANN Board
member and private attorney Rita Rodin says ICANN will make a decision
on this in 2007, and that the two basic sides on this issue have become
biased and vociferous. Some trademark lawyers say that being able to
contact domain name owners quickly in a dispute is crucial to minimizing
the damage of fake or infringing Web sites, for instance.
http://www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1172656996106
"CNNIC May Launch Children Domain Names"
SinoCast China Business Daily News (03/05/07)
China Network Information Center (CNNIC) recently held a survey about
children domain names on its Web site, which analysts say may mean that
CNNIC is planning to launch children domain names. The survey asked
respondents if most Chinese parents have considered children domain
names, if it is necessary to come up with children domain names, and
what would be a suitable price for registering a child's domain name.
Of the four price options offered, three are much lower than the current
average price of domain names.
http://www.sinocast.com/getArticle.php?cat=1&art=99007&k=S7zJzx
"Big Names May Not Prevail in Domain Disputes"
CNet (02/21/07) Sinrod, Eric J.
Three recent domain name arbitration cases show that a trademark owner
must prove all three fundamental points under the process to win a domain
name from a registrant, writes attorney Eric J. Sinrod. Arbitration
panels will award a domain name to a trademark owner if the trademark
is legitimate, if the registrant lacks legitimate interest in the domain
name, and if the registration being challenged has been made in bad
faith. In the recent case over MagicJohnsonTravelGroup.com, which was
being used by Myspecialprice.com, the domain name was transferred because
all three criteria were met. However, in two recent dispute cases over
pig.com and wargames.com, arbitration panels rejected the claims of
legitimate trademark holders. While companies did possess trademarks
for "pig" and "war games" in their respective niche
industries, both registrants showed legitimate interest in their respective
domain names and won their case. Many trademark holders today are using
domain name arbitration to win names in a matter of months, rather than
pursue a more lengthy process in the federal court system, even if a
court victory can award plaintiffs attorneys' fees and damages.
http://news.com.com/Big+names+may+not+prevail+in+domain+disputes/2010-1030_3-6160795.html
"Cerf: Internet Is a Reflection of Society"
IDG News Service (02/21/07) Ribeiro, John
Cybercrime and Internet fraud are problems that are socioeconomic in
nature, not technical problems, says Google VP and ICANN Chairman Vinton
Cerf. He says the problems that plague the Internet are a reflection
of society itself. "If you stand in front of a mirror and you don't
like what you see, it does not help to fix the mirror." Cerf predicts
that the next big Internet growth area will be sparked by mobile applications.
In support of this prediction, Cerf points to the IP packet layer architecture,
which separates applications from the communications medium, which can
be wireless and wireline. Cerf says it does not matter how the IP packet
is carried or what it is carrying. There are 2.5 billion mobile phone
users across the globe, and this number will grow with increasing development
in India and China. Cerf explains that people do not have to get permission
from ISPs to run applications on the edge of the Internet system because
the architecture of the Internet keeps intelligence at the outer edge,
thereby sparking an outburst of creativity, such as the founding of
Yahoo and Google.
http://www.infoworld.com/article/07/02/21/HNinternetreflectsociety_1.html
Back
to top
|