[UA-discuss] Language - how do you refer to non-ASCII to a non-technical audience?

Arto Isokoski arto.isokoski at internetregistry.info
Sun Jul 24 06:01:39 UTC 2016


It’s easy to agree with the below mentioned.

There is a fundamental error regarding IDNs. They are not
internationalized domain names, but localized, in my opinion…

BR,
Arto
TLD Registry Ltd: .在线 & .中文网





-----Alkuperäinen viesti-----
Lähettäjä: <ua-discuss-bounces at icann.org> on behalf of Don Hollander
<don.hollander at icann.org>
Päivämäärä: sunnuntai 24. heinäkuuta 2016 klo 7.54
Vastaanottaja: Dave Crocker <dcrocker at bbiw.net>
Kopio: "UA-discuss at icann.org" <UA-discuss at icann.org>
Aihe: Re: [UA-discuss] Language - how do you refer to non-ASCII to a
non-technical audience?

Thanks Dave.

What if your grandmother is living with you in Bangkok.   Is a domain name
in Thai really then an international domain name?

D


> On 24/07/2016, at 5:38 AM, Dave Crocker <dcrocker at bbiw.net> wrote:
> 
> On 7/22/2016 3:41 PM, Jothan Frakes wrote:
>> On Fri, Jul 22, 2016 at 12:21 PM, Don Hollander <don.hollander at icann.org
>> <mailto:don.hollander at icann.org>> wrote:
>> 
>>    I’ve been grappling with this for la very long and now find out I’m
>>    not the only one.
>> 
>>    So, how would you simply refer to IDNs.
> 
> 
> Having scanned the various responses and having thought a bit about
>what's likely to be easy for someone's grandmother, I'm afraid I can't
>think of anything better than international domain names.
> 
> There are two types of goals for a term.  One is that it is
>automatically understandable, without explanation.  The other is that a
>simple explanation is sufficient to make it comfortable for future use.
> 
> An average non-technical (and even most technical) person is likely to
>assume the term means that it's registered in some other country or
>refers to a place that is in another country, or the like.  So we lose on
>the 'automatic' goal.  I can't think of anything likely to win, because
>the very concept of different scripts is to obscure for most folk.
> 
> But I think that a pretty simple explanation will suffice for later uses
>of the term.
> 
> mumble.
> 
> d/
> 
> -- 
> 
>  Dave Crocker
>  Brandenburg InternetWorking
>  bbiw.net





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