Postal Agency Set to Get Doman Name
POSTAL AGENCY SET TO BECOME FIRST UN BODY TO HAVE OWN INTERNET DOMAIN NAME
New York, Oct 26 2009 1:10PM
The Universal Postal Union ">(<"http://www.upu.int/index.html">), the world’s second-oldest international organisation and one of the few United Nations agencies to pre-date the creation of the mother organisation, moved a step closer today to becoming the first to have its own domain name on the Internet – to be known as .post.
The Berne-based
UPU, established in 1874 as the primary forum for
co-operation between postal sector players, successfully
concluded negotiations with the Internet Corporation for
Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) in what Agency Director
General Edouard Dayan called an “historic” agreement,
providing a platform for innovation in global postal
services with opportunities to link their physical and
electronic dimensions.
The agreement must now go
through a 30-day public comment process before ICANN’s
board of directors will consider it for final approval.
“A top-level domain for a service-oriented industry
such as ours is an opportunity to develop a trusted space on
the Internet for integrating physical and electronic postal
services,” said Paul Donohoe, e-business manager at UPU
headquarters, responsible for the domain application and
ICANN negotiations.
“Post will be a unique and
focused Internet domain with the potential to connect the
entire postal community and its customers. The domain will
enable the UPU and the postal sector at large to work on
delivering new innovative Internet-based international
postal services, such as hybrid mail, e-commerce,
e-identity, e-communication and e-government, and built on
UPU standards.”
The new domain name, a distant
descendant of the relay stations set up millennia ago along
messengers’ routes to speed delivery, represents the
latest adaptation to the cyber-age of services that began on
nearly every continent with runners serving kings and
emperors. The first known postal document, found in Egypt,
dates from 255 BC.
“The UPU has helped mark out a
path for other intergovernmental organisations to sponsor
their own top-level domains and this helps us expand our
multi-stakeholder relationships in this field,” ICANN
president Rod Beckstrom said.
The UPU became a
specialised UN agency in 1948, three years after the
latter’s creation. The postal services of its 191 member
countries form the largest physical distribution network in
the world, employing nearly 6 million people to deliver some
430 billion letters and 6 billion parcels each year
with.
The only international organisation older than
the UPU is the Geneva-based International Telecommunication
Union (ITU), also a UN agency, which was founded in 1865 as
the International Telegraph
Union.
ENDS