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INTERNET SPACE
Berlin takes world lead with own domain name
by Staff Writers
Berlin (AFP) March 18, 2014


Deutsche Telekom to cut 4,900 jobs from troubled IT unit
Frankfurt (AFP) March 18, 2014 - German telecom giant Deutsche Telekom will cut 4,900 jobs over the next two years from its IT and consultancy unit T-Systems, the company said on Tuesday.

"We will cut 2,700 jobs this year and 2,200 jobs next year in Germany," a spokesman told AFP, confirming a report by daily Frankfurter Allegemeine Zeitung.

T-Systems has struggled for years to turn a profit, competing with IBM, EDS and other IT giants to provide companies with their computer network systems.

The subsidiary says it currently employs about 50,000 people, but the spokesman said the layoffs were only planned in home-market Germany for now.

"We are now looking at our reach in the rest of the world and we have yet to conclude on a way forward," the spokesman added.

T-Systems generated revenue of around 9.5 billion euros ($13 billion) in the 2013 financial year.

Berlin became the world's first city on Tuesday to have its own Internet domain name under plans to cater for Internet expansion.

Companies and individuals in the German capital can now request an Internet address ending in .berlin, beyond the traditional options of .com, .org or the German national ending .de.

Obtaining a dot-berlin website address costs about 50 euros ($70) a year and will be granted on a first-come, first-served basis.

Berlin Mayor Klaus Wowereit told a launch event that the domain "offers the possibility to highlight digitally that Berlin is where you live your life or base your business activities".

Dirk Krischenowski, of dotBERLIN, the company organising the rollout of the new domain name, said it created "more room for diversity, ideas and the naming" of things.

Several dozen other large cities are in the process of equipping themselves with their own Internet domain names, including .paris, .nyc, .london and .roma.

In 2011, the agency in charge of website addresses, ICANN, launched a scheme to widely extend the catalogue of so-called Top-Level Domains, which it says are needed due to the expansion of the Internet.

Other German cities domains such as .hamburg and .koeln (Cologne) are set be launched in the future.

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