Eurid Expands to Stockholm

Eurid is planning on opening several regional offices across Europe. The first of these has opened in Stockholm and will be followed later this year by Pisa and Prague.

From the official press release:

Following the success of new Internet top level domain .eu, EURid – the Brussels based registry for all Internet addresses ending with “.eu” – has opened a regional office in Stockholm, Sweden to support Northern Europe. As a next step, offices are also planned for the Czech Republic and Italy.

The Stockholm office and the future regional offices in Prague and Pisa will assume responsibility for the helpdesk support offered to registrars, domain name holders and the general public in their respective local languages.

By establishing regional offices EURid is able to provide a better service by being closer to the market and the end user.

Since April this year it has been possible for anyone living within the European Union to register a .eu domain name. So far there are about 2.1 million registered domain names, making .eu the seventh largest top level domain in the world.

“We stated already in our proposal to the European Commission that we intended to establish a regional structure. I am now pleased to see that the Stockholm office is in place and that the other offices will follow soon. Stockholm, and Scandinavia in general, is a very IT mature region and ranks high in the number of registered .eu domain names so it was natural to place our Northern region office there, says Marc Van Wesemael, General Manager of EURid.

The Stockholm office will be managed by Patrik Lindén who has been with EURid since January. Patrik has previous experience with the Swedish Internet Infrastructure Foundation (IIS), the registry for the national Swedish Internet top level domain .se.

New support staff has been hired and will gradually take over the support for Swedish, Danish, Finnish and Lithuanian. While English will be supported from both locations, for the time being Latvian and Estonian will continue to be supported from the Brussels headquarters. To ensure high quality support the new team will first be trained and will for a while work in tandem with the Brussels’ office.

Published
Categorised as Eurid

By Michele Neylon

Michele is founder and managing director of Irish domain registrar and hosting company Blacknight. Michele has been deeply involved in domain and internet policy discussions for more than a decade. He also co-hosts the Technology.ie podcast.

2 comments

  1. The funniest is that several applications of Swedish public bodies have been rejected! Stockholm City’s, among others…

  2. Christine

    Typical 🙂

    I wish they’d invest money in sorting out the mess in their rules etc., rather than expanding the number of offices they have

    Michele

Comments are closed.

Exit mobile version