ICANN Green Lights .xxx Domain

With the application for an .xxx domain for adult entertainment approved, proponents say it will help web filtering efforts, while others are not so sure

The board of directors for the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) voted late Friday to allow the longstanding application for an .xxx domain for the adult entertainment industry to move forward.

The application will now move on to ICANN’s Governmental Advisory Committee. The creation of a top-level domain for adult sites has been an ongoing discussion for several years. ICM Registry, a private company that is pushing for the domain, welcomed the board’s decision and said it expects to go live with .xxx domains at the start of 2011.

But the creation of a top-level domain for adult-themed sites may not have the impact on web security some hope and, while ICM noted that the domain will enable filters to more effectively label content, there is no provision to force adult sites to switch to .xxx from other domains.

“Expecting pornographers to voluntary give up their successful .com addresses and locate solely on the .xxx domain is both foolish and shortsighted,” said Donna Rice Hughes, president of Enough Is Enough, in a statement. “Arguments presented suggesting that the US Congress will be able to pass a law to require all pornographers to leave the .xxx space would likely not pass, and even if passed, would likely be either struck down in the federal courts or be unenforced. Historically, all attempts by Congress to regulate internet pornography have not been upheld by the US Supreme Court.”

New domain will be unchecked

Without such a rule to forcibly create a ‘red-light district’ on the internet, the impact on aeb filtering by businesses, parents and schools is unlikely to be game-changing.

“It might make it easier for a user to realise that the link is going to an adult site, but parental control software will not necessarily assume adult sites are concentrated in this new domain and will continue to track and classify sites in all major domains,” said Vincent Weafer, vice president of Symantec Security Response.

One could argue a rule forcing adult sites to only use .xxx would make it easier for end users to recognise the sites, he added, but “I don’t see this happening or being enforceable on a global basis”.

Changing the domain also won’t change the sites’ popularity for attackers, Weafer added, “as recent changes in the threat landscape have shown us that attackers are injecting their malicious scripts into multiple types of legitimate Websites, which in turn lead to malicious code downloads,” he said. “So, concentrating adult sites within the .xxx domain will not impact this trend.”

According to ICM, having an .xxx domain will help people who do not want to encounter adult sites to avoid them.

“It’s been a long time coming, but I’m excited about the fact that .xxx will soon become a reality,” ICM chairman Stuart Lawley said in a statement on the ICANN decision. “This is great news.”