The most unfavorable scenario is that everyone will have to register domain names using the Cyrillic top-level domain.
www.inopressa.ru/print/guardian/2008/01/03/12 : 38: 03 / kremlin
An interesting look at Cyrillic domains.
In fact, if they are controlled only in Russia, then hello censor.
:-(
Cyrillic domains are already near:
info.nic.ru/st/10/out_1238.shtml')
The administrators of national top-level domains (ccTLDs) independently decide the issue of opening the registration of domains with symbols of national alphabets in the domain zones entrusted to them. IDNs were the first to be deployed in China (CN), Japan (JP) and Taiwan (TW). The administrators of these national domains, together with the public domain administrators INFO and ORG, with the support of ICANN, have developed Guidelines defining the general procedure for the implementation of multilingual domains.
About 1.5% of all domains registered in the world are multilingual domains (in absolute figures - about 1 million domains). Today, domain names with symbols of national alphabets are registered in more than 40 domain zones of both common use (COM, NET, ORG, BIZ, INFO) and national (South Korea (KR), Germany (DE), Austria (AT), Switzerland (SN), China (CN), Portugal (RT), Cocos Islands (SS), Tuvalu (TV), Brazil (BR), Greece (GR), Hong Kong (NK), Singapore (SG), Poland (PL), Sweden (SE), Lithuania (LT), etc.). The list of domains in which registration of multilingual domain names is possible is constantly expanding.