At the Seventh General Meeting (held on 18 July 2013),[8] the Members unanimously voted to incorporate RadioDNS as a Company Limited by Guarantee, registered in England and Wales.
This returns a CNAME record known as the "authoritative FQDN", which is a domain that represents the requested radio service.
From this domain, SRV record lookups can be performed to verify the availability and location of various other applications that utilise RadioDNS.
To identify a radio service on 95.8 MHz with a country code of E1 and the PI code C479, the following FQDN is constructed: Querying this domain returns a CNAME record: This CNAME record can then be used to look up SRV records that advertise the availability of applications based upon RadioDNS (in this example an application identified by the name radiovis): The linking of broadcast media with IP, as RadioDNS enables, allows additional functionality on receivers.
Other examples being worked on by the RadioDNS project include RadioTAG, a way for a listener to request more information, or simply bookmark a place, in a live broadcast.
RadioText+ (RT+) in RDS (FM) and DynamicLabel Plus (DL+) in DAB already provide content type Programme.PROGRAMME.HOMEPAGE (and possibly Info.INFO.URL) which allows radio stations to pass along their website address to receivers without the need for a DNS registration.