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- Nov 9, 2024
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In the 2012 new gTLD round, applicants had more room to resolve string contention privately after strings were revealed. In the 2026 round, that option appears much more limited.
But if applicants can discover possible string conflicts before Reveal Day, they may still change strategy early, by choosing another string, finding partners, or stepping back before the conflict becomes public.
As a registrar, this matters because today's approved strings may become tomorrow's domain extensions that resellers, investors, and end users actually register and use.
So is pre-Reveal Day conflict discovery just responsible planning, or does it create an unfair information advantage?
But if applicants can discover possible string conflicts before Reveal Day, they may still change strategy early, by choosing another string, finding partners, or stepping back before the conflict becomes public.
As a registrar, this matters because today's approved strings may become tomorrow's domain extensions that resellers, investors, and end users actually register and use.
So is pre-Reveal Day conflict discovery just responsible planning, or does it create an unfair information advantage?