The Argus

Broadband deficit costing IT in County Louth

NEW DATA SHOWS 364 ‘DOT IE’ DOMAIN NAMES REGISTERED HERE

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NEW data has revealed that 364 .ie domains were registered in Louth in the first half of 2016 to June 30, according to the latest dot ie Domain Profile Report, published by the IE Domain Registry (IEDR), the company responsibl­e for the management and administra­tion of Ireland’s official internet address.

The figure is a 3.1% decrease on the same period of 2015. Overall .ie domain registrati­ons in Leinster in H1 2016 came to 11,386, a 6.4% decrease on the same period last year.

A total of 18,179 .ie domains, one hundred a day, were registered in the first half of 2016. Corporate bodies and sole traders made up 72% of all .ie registrati­ons.

There is now a total of 217,374 registered .ie domains in the IEDR database. This represents an almost 6% increase on June 2015, or a 47.8% increase over the last six years.

David Curtin, Chief Executive of IEDR, said: ‘Nationally, the .ie domain database continues to grow at a steady rate.

‘Last year, we recorded just under one hundred .ie registrati­ons each day, so it’s encouragin­g to surpass that in the first half of 2016. Clearly, Irish businesses value .ie’s ‘identifiab­ly Irish’ brand.

‘However, the decrease in registrati­ons in Louth points to flaws in Ireland’s internet infrastruc­ture, particular­ly in rural Ireland where there are some pervasive issues.

‘Access to high-speed broadband remains a chronic problem, and continued delays to the National Broadband Plan are keeping households and SMEs offline.

‘Even for those who can access fast internet, digital training resources are lacking in many LEOs and county councils. In the long term, this will only frustrate regional developmen­t and hold back the growth of Ireland’s digital economy.

‘But, some businesses have no intention of building an online presence. According to our recent Digital Health Index research, a small cohort of SMEs are totally offline and 55% have ‘no intention’ of changing that. This mentality may hamper .ie registrati­ons and e-commerce growth in the future’.

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