Hebrew, Hindi, other scripts get Web domain nod

October 30, 2009 11:23 am | Updated 11:33 am IST - SEOUL

A woman adjusts her glasses while surfing the Internet at an Internet cafe in Beijing on Thursday. The nonprofit body that oversees Internet addresses approved on Friday the use of Hebrew, Hindi, Korean, Chinese and other scripts not based on the Latin alphabet in a decision that could make the Web dramatically more inclusive.  Photo: AP.

A woman adjusts her glasses while surfing the Internet at an Internet cafe in Beijing on Thursday. The nonprofit body that oversees Internet addresses approved on Friday the use of Hebrew, Hindi, Korean, Chinese and other scripts not based on the Latin alphabet in a decision that could make the Web dramatically more inclusive. Photo: AP.

The non-profit body that oversees Internet addresses has approved the use of Hebrew, Hindi, Korean and other scripts not based on the Latin alphabet in a decision that could make the Web dramatically more inclusive.

The board of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers - or ICANN - voted on Friday to allow such scripts in so-called domain names at a meeting in South Korea’s capital.

The decision was widely expected and follows years of debate and testing.

It clears the way for governments or their designees to submit requests for specific names, likely beginning on November 16. Internet users could start seeing them in use early next year, particularly in Arabic, Chinese and other scripts in which demand has been among the highest, ICANN officials say.

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