If you’re setting up a Hebrew website, you no longer have to register a domain name using the Latin alphabet. Israelis are already prolific internet users, but for a significant chunk of the world’s population, the Latin alphabet is unfamiliar and makes internet use difficult. From next year, this will all change as domain names will become available in several non-Latin scripts such as Mandarin Chinese, Cyrillic and
Arabic.
Arabic.
ICANN, the regulatory body for the setting of domain names, called the
process of allowing domain names in non-Latin languages "the
internationalization of the Internet."
process of allowing domain names in non-Latin languages "the
internationalization of the Internet."