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Dot-ca registration to get easier later this year

By:  Rafael Ruffolo On: 15 Jan 2010 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

CIRA, the non-profit corporation in charge of dishing out Canadian domains, is changing its registry system and streamlining the process that consumers and business go through to purchase a dot-ca address. Find out the motivation for the changes and what it will mean for Canadian Web site owners

Dot-ca registration to get easier later this year
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The organization responsible for operating the dot-ca domain space is rewriting its registry to simplify the registration process for Canadian users and businesses.

 

One of the major changes being undertaken by the Canadian Internet Registry Authority will make Web site registrars such as Tucows Inc. or The Go Daddy Group Inc. more directly responsible for validating dot.ca addresses under the Canadian presence requirement.

 

Under the current system, after purchasing a dot-ca domain from a Web site registrar, the registrant will be contacted separately by CIRA for security and verification purposes.

 

“We have been injecting ourselves between the end user and the (Web site) providers,” said CIRA President and CEO Byron Holland. He added that this often created a lot of confusion and has now led to an inefficient system for today’s Web site registrants.

 

Holland said that while the registry system has ensured the dot-ca domain to be one of the most secure in the world, the strong demand from registrants to streamline the process means Web site registrars will not handle the verification procedure.

 

However, if a dot-ca domain holder wants to transfer ownership of their address — which Holland said is technique often employed by cyber criminals — the CIRA will step in and send out a notice to the registrant.

 

CIRA is planning the registry rewrite — which has been just under two years in the making and has involved nearly everybody working in the CIRA — to be fully completed in October.

 

Other changes being made will be focused on the business user, especially those who might be managing multiple dot-ca domain addresses.

 

In addition to significantly shortening and simplifying the 27 page registrant agreement that dot-ca buyers have been required to sign, the CIRA is working on functionality in its system that would make purchasing multiple domains at multiple registrars less time consuming.


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo joined ComputerWorld as a staff writer in June 2007 and was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism. He is interested in government IT, copyright, virt... more

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