Your daily round-up of some of the other stories in the news
ICANN goes ahead with .africa TLD
We’re familiar with cities (.london), countries (.uk), regional identities (.cat) and of course types of organisations (.com, .gov) having their own top-level domains, but no continent has had its own TLD – until now.
ICANN, the body that oversees the internet’s namespace, is to go ahead with its .africa TLD after a court tussle between ICANN and DotConnectAfrica.
Registrations will be handled by ZA Central Registry, a South African company, and will open in July, the BBC reported.
Smart jacket gets a price – and a delayed launch
Just in case you don’t have quite enough smart devices to lug around with you during the day, you’ll be glad to hear that Levi’s smart jacket is one step further away from being vapourware and one step closer to being a reality.
The jacket, the strange lovechild of Google’s Project Jacquard smart fabric and venerable fashion brand Levi’s, was first announced at Google I/O last year. Project Jacquard lead Paul Dillinger and Levi’s global product innovation head Ivan Poupyrev told an audience at the SXSW festival in Austin, Texas at the weekend that the jacket will cost $350 – but that you’ll now have to wait until the autumn for it.
We’ll believe it when we see it – Project Jacquard is from the same Google brainwave incubator that produced the Ara modular phone idea, which was cancelled in September. What could possibly go wrong?
Human not required behind the wheel after all
Less than three months after Uber packed up its testing programme for self-driving cars in California and moved to Arizona, California has now relaxed the rules on self-driving cars.
Proposed new regulations from the Department of Motor Vehicles include dropping the requirement for a human being to be in the car while it’s being tested on public roads, and also rows back on the requirement for a steering wheel and pedals that would allow a human to take over the car, Bloomberg reported.
Draft regulations published in 2015 requiring pedals, a steering wheel and a carbon-based life-form had “gravely disappointed” Google, which has been at the forefront of developing driverless cars.
Catch up with all of today’s stories on Naked Security
Anonymous
From the being-picky department, Australia (.au) and Antarctica (.aq) are both continents that already have a TLD.
I hope California’s proposed regulations include having an emergency stop button, if not full steering wheel/pedal controls.
Kate Bevan
I did think about noting the .au for Australia, but didn’t on the grounds that it’s a country TLD, though I concede we’re dancing on the head of a pin with that one. I didn’t know about the .aq, though – thank you!
Paul Ducklin
Strictly speaking you are in the clear not counting .AU as a continental TLD.
The .AU TLD covers mainland Oz and its proximate offshore islands *plus two Australian overseas territories that IMO cannot be considered part of the continental landmass*. Several Australian overseas territories have their own TLDs, some of which have been controversially connected with cybercrime and spamming in the past, but not every territory got its own TLD when the names were handed out.
I don’t want to appear pedantic by naming them here individually, but…
…who am I kidding? Ashmore and Cartier Islands and the Coral Sea Islands are the ones to look for. The latter, in case you wish to dismiss it as a tiny lump of nothing, officially has an area of 780,000 square kilometres, which is significantly larger than Texas, and a whopping 250 times bigger than Rhode Island and Providence Plantations.
Therefore .AU does not denote a continent, though it may be the only TLD that is *more* than a continent.
You heard it here first, folks.
PS. Good job no one noticed .ASIA yet :-)