Financial Times FT.com

Pact widens web's world appeal

By Christian Oliver in Seoul, Kathrin Hille in Beijing,and Joseph Menn in San Francisco

Published: October 31 2009 02:00 | Last updated: October 31 2009 02:00

The world body controlling internet addresses agreed yesterday to allow countries to mark their territory with their own abbreviations, as in .uk or .fr, as well as their own alphabets.

Icann's willingness to add top-level country codes in Chinese, Korean, Cyrillic, and Arabic characters ends a monopoly by Latin letters that has endured since the web's beginning and limited its appeal.

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