On Sat, Apr 22, 2017 at 01:32:08PM +0000, nalini.elkins@insidethestack.com wrote> > For example, you may wish to see the following permutations which have already been obtained. (And, it appears not by Apple) > > www.applé.com www.xn--appl-epa.com www.xn--appl-epa.com > www.applê.com www.xn--appl-jpa.com www.xn--appl-jpa.com > www.applė.com www.xn--appl-yva.com www.xn--appl-yva.com > www.applę.com www.xn--appl-8va.com www.xn--appl-8va.com Do you think that those qualify as "homographs"? I suppose they might, as might àpple.com and so on, but these at least don't seem to me to be any different than app1e.com, which we decided long ago was Apple's problem and nobody else's. This is quite different to the case of true homoglyphs of the sort that Asmus is talking about, where the very same glyph is normally used in two different scripts such that nobody would be able to tell the difference. One maybe could argue that "аррӏе" is pure homoglyphs (0430,0440,0440,04CF, 0435), but I think it's tough to argue for it. Remember, the IDNA rules are really _quite_ restrictive, and if registries also require "same script per label" those restrictions catch an _awful_ lot of corner cases (that was the outcome of the "paypal" controversy some time ago). If you want to argue that policy should be different, that's fine, but it seems to me to require some PDP within ICANN. Note that ICANN is probably going to propose some rules for variant handling, and combined with the LGR stuff that is working its way through the system we may find an awful lot of stuff is blocked. In any case, I think our purpose is very badly served by conflating these two different kinds of issues. Best regards, A -- Andrew Sullivan ajs@anvilwalrusden.com