About 67% of the world's population, or 5.5 billion people, currently use the Internet. This could improve significantly if the fonts of more than 900 languages with their own alphabets were made usable in Internet domains. This would enable speakers of these languages to use the Internet with email addresses in their native languages, which would be accepted for registration and communication across various systems.
This is why the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) launched the Universal Acceptance (UA) movement. Over the past few years, numerous organizations worldwide have come together to develop technical solutions aimed at
making this vision a reality.
Armenia, represented by the “Internet Society” NGO was one of the first to join the movement. The organization is responsible for registering and developing the Armenian-script .հայ domain. Through the efforts of a dedicated professional team, it is currently testing and optimizing the technical conditions for using Armenian-script email addresses.
Currently, 190 countries have joined the UA movement, which is focused on developing a multilingual Internet.