Are you ready for the Big Bang?

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Are you ready for the Big Bang?

The Internet is about to experience a Big Bang, with an explosion in the number of top-level domains (TLDs) from about 300 to what could be 1500 over the next few years

The first of the new TLDs will soon start to be delegated, explained Stephane Van Gelder who has his own consulting firm, yesterday, and they are expected to go live within a year. Despite repeated delays to the launch, said Van Gelder: “We can expect new gTLDs to begin arriving Q3/Q4 this year.”

Panelists in the session yesterday explained how the ICANN process works, highlighting issues of concern to brand-owner applicants, and discussing what the expansion will mean for trademark owners and Internet users. A further session today will focus on trademark protection options.

One theme yesterday was the growing pains of the expansion. “This program was not designed for brands. It was designed to expand domain space and provide more choice,” said Van Gelder, who used to chair ICANN’s GNSO, which drew up plans for the new gTLD rollout. One example of the unintended consequences is whether so-called “closed generic” registries, where a brand owner seeks to operate exclusively a TLD for a generic word such as books, would create competition problems. Another is whether applications that differ only in that one is singular and another plural should be treated as in contention.

With the panel representing different viewpoints, they did not agree on everything. But on at least two points they were in accord.

First, things will only get more complicated. Moderator Adam Scoville of RE/MAX and chair of INTA’s Internet Committee predicted a “shakedown in the market” as TLDs are launched, bought and sold. And, he added: “If price comes down and the process becomes more stable, there will be many more brand applicants in the second round.”

Lawyer John Berryhill, who advises gTLD applicant Uniregistry, said many applicants were being frustrated in their intentions to provide additional protections, for things such as personality rights.

He also questioned whether the new gTLDs would achieve all of ICANN’s objectives: “Domainers are highly skeptical. They think .coms will go up in value.”

Second, ICANN needs reform—but is still the only game in town. “Deadlines have been missed time and time again. These delays undermine the credibility of ICANN to a large extent,” said Nick Wood of Com Laude, while Berryhill added: “It’s not a structure that facilitates debate.” But as Van Gelder said: “There is an alternative [government control of the Internet] and we probably wouldn’t like it.”

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

Despite a broader slowdown in US IP partner hiring in 2025, litigation demand drove aggressive lateral expansion at select firms
Winston Taylor is expected to launch in May 2026 with more than 1,400 lawyers across the US, UK, Europe, Latin America and the Middle East
News of White & Case asking its London staff to work from the office four days a week and a loss for Canva at the Delhi High Court were also among the top talking points
With boutiques offering an attractive alternative to larger firms, former Gilbert’s partner Nisha Anand says her new firm will be built on tech-smart practitioners, flexible fees, and specialised expertise
IP specialists Jonathan Moss and Jessie Bowhill, who worked on cases concerning bitcoin, Ed Sheeran, and the Getty v Stability AI dispute, received the KC nod
Hannah Brown, an active AIPPI member, argues that DEI commitments must be backed up with actions, not just words
A ruling in the Kodak v Fujifilm dispute and a win for Google were among the major recent developments
Nick Aries and Elizabeth Louca at Bird & Bird unpick the legal questions raised by a very public social media spat concerning the ‘Brooklyn Beckham’ trademark
Michael Conway, who joined Birketts after nearly two decades at an IP boutique, says he was intrigued by the challenge of joining a general practice firm
The private-equity-backed firm said hires from DLA Piper and Eversheds Sutherland will help it become the IP partner of choice for innovative businesses
Gift this article