.cat

.cat
Introduced 2005
TLD type Sponsored top-level domain
Status Active
Registry Associació puntCAT
Sponsor Fundació puntCat
Intended use Catalan linguistic and cultural community
Registered domains 112,037 (February 2017)[1]
Registration restrictions Screening is done both before and after registration to ensure registrants are part of applicable community
Structure Direct second-level registrations are allowed
Documents ICANN New sTLD RFP Application
Dispute policies UDRP, Charter Eligibility Dispute Resolution Procedure (CEDRP), Compliance Reconsideration Policy (CRP)
Website www.Domini.cat
DNSSEC Yes

.cat (Catalan pronunciation: [ˈpunt ˈkat]) is a sponsored top-level domain intended to be used to highlight the Catalan language and culture. Its policy has been developed by ICANN and Fundació puntCAT. It was approved in September 2005.[2]

History

Before .cat was available, and given the reluctance of certain Catalan institutions, companies, and people, to use .es, .ad, .fr, .it domains (depending on the state respectively) for their domains, alternatives emerged.[3] An example of this was the website for the city of Girona in Catalonia, which preferred to use a .gi domain ("http://www.ajuntament.gi/", the word "ajuntament" meaning both "city council" and "town hall"), even though .gi is the country code for Gibraltar, instead of the corresponding .es as a Spanish local authority.[4]

To solve this matter, in September 2005 the .cat TLD was approved, designed to meet the wishes and needs of the Catalan linguistic and cultural community on the Internet. This community is made up of those who use Catalan for their online communications, and/or promote the different aspects of Catalan culture online and prefer it to any other domain. The initial registration period went from February 13, 2006, to April 21, 2006. The registry was open to everybody starting April 23, 2006.[5]

Restrictions

The .cat domain is not territorial, but applies to the whole Catalan-speaking community, whether or not a site is based in Spanish Catalonia. In order to be granted a .cat domain, one needs to belong to the Catalan linguistic and cultural community on the Internet. A person, organization or company is considered to belong if they either:[5]

Despite the restrictions, the domain has been exploited for feline-related domain hacks, such as nyan.cat.[6]

Impact

Following the success of the .cat domain, other language and culture-based domain names have emerged, such as .eus and .gal for the Basque language and culture (Euskadi) and the Galician language and culture (Galicia), respectively, as well as the .bzh domain-name dedicated to the Breton language and culture in Brittany.[7][8][9]

References

  1. "fundació.cat". fundacio.cat. 2017-02-27. Retrieved 2017-02-27.
  2. "CAT". Domini.cat. Retrieved 2013-10-24.
  3. The .ad domain is somewhat of an exception here, for Catalan is the main official language espoused by the government of Andorra and therefore there is no serious reluctance by the Catalan-speaking community to use the .ad domain there, since it is not associated with officially-fostered encroachment by any other language or the official sidelining or silencing of Catalan.
  4. Currently http://www.ajuntament.gi/ redirects to http://www2.girona.cat/ca
  5. 1 2 "CAT". Domini.cat. Retrieved 2013-10-24.
  6. "Domain Hacks - 100 Sites Using Unusual Top-Level Domains". webhost.al. 2015-05-14. Retrieved 2015-05-14.
  7. "Navegar en català" ("Navigating in Catalan"), Vilaweb, 16 May 2014. (Article in Catalan)
  8. Internauta Radio Programme from 13 May 2014, about the .cat domain on the web and on the PuntCat Foundation, Vilaweb. (Programme & interview in Catalan). It can also be found here: Internauta Podcasts
  9. PointBZH.com, Association www.bzh, Quimper. (Site in Breton, French and English)


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