[AfrICANN-discuss] Africa: Less Than 1 Million Country Domain
Sites, says new survey
Badru Ntege (NFT)
badru.ntege at nftconsult.com
Sun Mar 28 17:19:38 SAST 2010
Though the numbers are low there seems to be growing trend. However the
question goes what lessons can we learn from south Africa for the rest of
the continent. Price is definitely a factor but I wonder what else can be
done
From: africann-bounces at afrinic.net [mailto:africann-bounces at afrinic.net] On
Behalf Of Anne-Rachel Inné
Sent: Saturday, March 27, 2010 7:44 PM
To: africann at afrinic.net
Subject: [AfrICANN-discuss] Africa: Less Than 1 Million Country Domain
Sites, says new survey
Africa: Less Than 1 Million Country Domain Sites, says new survey
A country domain is an Internet 'top level' code assigned to a country, for
example .za (South Africa), .uk (United Kingdom), .de (Germany), .fr
(France) and .zw (Zimbabwe). ZADNA is the Department of
Communications-funded agency in charge of managing SA's internet .za space.
The .ZADNA report also found that most South African businesses and people
(83%) prefer to use .za ahead of .com (15%). However, more than half of
Africa's one million country domain websites registrations are in South
Africa, according to the survey, which means 535,711.za domains are
registered, 16,000 (3%of all South African sites) of which are .org.za
websites.
"These 535,711 are what we call active websites because we do delete a
couple of websites each month due to non-renewal," Mpisane said. There are
roughly 90,000 (17%) websites registered in South Africa under the .com
domain.
Mpisane said: "The research results are very important as they provide
answers to most of the questions we and our stakeholders had about improving
the .za space. These answers clarify what interventions .ZADNA or its
stakeholders need to make to improve our Internet space."
Registering one .za website costs about R50, and a .com website costs
roughly US$7.
"When someone registers a country domain (.za) website, the money stays in
SA, while a .com website registration fee leaves the country," Mpisane said,
pleading with South Africans to register country domain websites to support
the .za space.
Furthermore, most businesses interviewed (58%) prefer registering their
products and brand names across multiple domain names to counter the
ever-increasing instances of trademark abuse, Mpisane revealed.
Internet name-tampering ('squatting') has become a new trend and a lucrative
business in the current Internet space, where the number of registered
websites worldwide now stands at 192 million, 85 million of which are .com
websites. Mpisane advised businesses to check time and time again with their
ISPs if their domain name has been tampered with.
(Source: Biz-Community)
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