No One Wants The Not-Coms 281
angkor points to this Siliconvalley.com article about companies not jumping for the newfangled TLDs like dot-biz. "This is delicious revenge for all the spam I've gotten reminding me to reserve new domain names now before they're all gone ... ." Besides the nice sound of "dot com," perhaps the restrictions surrounding the new official TLDs help to prevent them selling like hotcakes. The world won't be fair until the LED museum and similar sites are offered -- No, given! -- .museum addresses.
Give em the .biz (Score:1)
My $0.02
Re:Give em the .biz (Score:2)
Good!! (Score:1)
Re:Good!! (Score:2)
Then again, it's MHO, perhaps there's people in the world who think it _is_ cool, after all, Home Shopping, QVC, et al, continue to thrive selling the stuff you once had to venture to garage sales to find.
Why bother with the new domain.... (Score:1)
I'm sure I could do it again in the
It's easy to see why nobody is buying these (Score:4, Insightful)
2) Web users don't grok it. Let's face it, most Web users think AOL is the Web. They don't know about .gov or .org, they don't even know .mil exists, and if you throw a .ru or a .uk at them, they can't cope.
3) Would you want to have your company at: mygoofyasscompany.biz? It just sounds so.. so.. 1990s!
Re:It's easy to see why nobody is buying these (Score:3, Insightful)
This is the equivalent of adding
.kids or
Re:It's easy to see why nobody is buying these (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It's easy to see why nobody is buying these (Score:2)
Redundant, and yet strangely compelling and lucrative... ;)
Really, a going .com can't afford not to have .biz, as it weakens their brand and signals that the .com might be snatchable. .biz is a tax, a doubled renewal free, pure and simple.
Re:It's easy to see why nobody is buying these (Score:2)
If you want a .personal page (Score:2)
The Domain Name Registry for [government.pn]
Pitcairn Island!
Re:It's easy to see why nobody is buying these (Score:2)
How do they cope with getting "snail mail", faxes or telephone calls? Typically because they are in very different places, or different lines of business.
Indeed does anyone one know of two companies with the same name and line of business which trade globally?
just wait.. (Score:2, Interesting)
so it'll be some time before ppl begin recognizing these new TLDs. Slowly but surely they'll become as well known as .com and then they'll be a rush for that. So just wait.
Re:just wait.. (Score:2, Funny)
"The Best Argument against democracy is a 5-minute talk with the average voter"-Churchill
Re:just wait.. (Score:2)
About a year ago I was trying to set up a "Reply-To" address for my Sprint PCS Wireless Web Email©®. After many attempts I called their support line and got transfered to a "web support specialist".
At this point I'm afraid I managed to use at least six of the seven words you can't say on TV... (BTW, that wasn't the problem at all; their "Reply-To" mechanism was and as far as I know still is demonstrably broken for any address.)
Where do I demand a .museum domain for my...? (Score:1)
Funny... (Score:5, Interesting)
I might as well be creative creating a new
Re:Funny... (Score:2)
I agree with your stance, but aren't you worried that if you don't defend .biz/.bob/.trademark then you're setting yourself up for a snatch of your .com?
I don't mean that you'll lose it, but have you weighed up the costs of having to defend it?
.com will be around for a long time to come (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:.com will be around for a long time to come (Score:3, Funny)
Re:.com will be around for a long time to come (Score:1)
Re:.com will be around for a long time to come (Score:2)
(ObDisclaimer: I work for the company administrating .name)
Re:.com will be around for a long time to come (Score:2)
Ouch. I'd never even considered registering just surnames, then reselling all the third level given names. I wonder who's got smith.name.
Re:.com will be around for a long time to come (Score:2)
Contrary to .com/.net/.org, where ALL of the 5000 (and probably many more) most common surnames in US has been taken, and where your
chance of getting a firstname@lastname address
or firstname.lastname address is completely dependent on the whim of the owner, under ".name" noone can buy just the lastname and deny people access to it.
Re:.com will be around for a long time to come (Score:2)
Noone. You *can't* register just surnames.
Then, I suppose the many other thousands of latecomers to .name registration will be disappointed to find
is already taken?Re:.com will be around for a long time to come (Score:2)
Then, I suppose the many other thousands of latecomers to .name registration will be disappointed to find john.smith.name is already taken?
Congratulations, welcome to the world of marketing. You promote some bit of fluff as a 'must-have'. Then create an artificially scarce resource to scare consumers into purchasing in the offchance they may use it in case they 'lose out'. I doubt anyone will be disappointed to not get a .name, it's a pretty staid TLD and only of any use as a vanity address (for 99% of people their work email address is the only thing they'll ever need). Those that want vanity domains will probably rather think up imaginative names using the existing TLDs (not sure what my phillip.co.uk says about how imaginative I am :-))
Phillip.
Re:.com will be around for a long time to come (Score:2)
Obviously john47.smith.name isn't as attractive as john.smith.name, but it's still a lot better than a lot of the options out there.
And in some countries, such as France, the number of lastnames in use are close to a million.
Re:.com will be around for a long time to come (Score:2)
Uh, wait... how does that work then? You have to have a first.last.name? Doesn't that prang the whole top/second/third level domain heirarchy? Didn't you give an example of firstname@lastname.name? And what about madonna.name? And isn't one explicit intended use of .name for nicknames, which tend to be one word? Who's monitoring and enforcing non-abuse of 2ndLD .names?
By the way, thanks for all the informed responses on this issue, vidarh, it's appreciated. Do you have a link to an idiot's guide to .name?
Re:.com will be around for a long time to come (Score:2)
Essentially the registry offers e-mail forwarding on firstname@lastname.name adresses, and that is why you must register third level names for domains, so that everyone can share the second level for e-mail adresses.
There's no monitoring of abuse of second level names, but there is a dispute resolution policy that require you to prove that you have the name (or something reasonably close to it) if someone claims that you are infringing on their trademark.
For nicknames, it is intended that you must still use two levels. So you could register bill.clinton.name even if your name is william.clinton.name, but you wouldn't be able to register just bill.name
Other combinations are allowed as well, as long as it's something you are "commonly known as". So it could be argued that commander.taco.name would be a valid registration.
Anyway, the registration guidelines are only enforced if someone formally challenge your registration. But registering ronald.macdonald.name or mickey.mouse.name would most likely be a bad idea unless that's really your name :)
Re:.com will be around for a long time to come (Score:2)
It looks like you can get around it if you have a multipart last name, though, like osama@bin.laden.name. Speaking of which, did they not even stop to coinsider cultures that don't have a distinct given_name+surname format?
-Ed
All your qa'eda are belong to US!
Re:.com will be around for a long time to come (Score:2)
If it was possible to register gates.name, you'd have to deal with that registrant to get bill@gates.name, and you'd be screwed if that registrant didn't want to share.
Instead you can register bill.gates.name and bill@gates.name separately, and have bill@gates.name forwarded to whatever account you want.
Look for the e-mail forwarding service in the ICANN documents.
Re:.com will be around for a long time to come (Score:2)
The general rule is that you'd have to use a hyphen, or write the separate parts as one.
So to use your example, it would be osama@bin-laden.name, or osama@binladen.name.
Of course some cultures doesn't even use surnames, or use the surname first and the given name afterwards.
So you'd be allowed to register smith.john.name if you'd like to. Or foo.sonof-bar.name
It's not ideal, but it's the first try on a namespace purely for personal use, and after all if your name is too common or too difficult to fit into this scheme, you still have the option of a lot of other TLD's. Noone is being forced to use .name for personal names. .name is just another alternative that may give people more choice,
and for most people hopefully a logical naming
system.
Lets just give everyone a number.. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Lets just give everyone a number.. (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, but the real question is, do you assign one or two IP addresses to Siamese twins?
Re:Lets just give everyone a number.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Lets just give everyone a number.. (Score:1)
Then you get the best of both worlds. Easy-to-remember DNS names, and the uniqueness of an IP address!
127.64.156.23.ip
Re:Lets just give everyone a number.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously, when I first started on the net I knew more sites by IP address than by name, now I can hardly remember any. The neat thing then was looking at an address and knowing it was where it was from. Don't have much of a clue anymore with the way .com can really be pretty much anywhere in the world. Same would happen with the new TLDs, too, I guess.
It would be pretty neat to see an ibm.museum site, but probably run by some pr0n twink, as all these new TLDs are really for, that and making $$$ money, because ABC, CBS, IBM, AMR, DOW, etc all would need to glom onto them before the pr0n twinks and scam artists.
Hello from the President of IBM.biz,
We are offering new systems, software, support and a lifetime guarantee, just like major corporations use all over the world, all for $1000. Please charge to VISA, MC, DISCOVER, AMEX, including your preferred shipping address.
Harrison Fnord, CEO IBM.biz
e.g. First National Pr0n of Nebraska, Cobbco Pointy Sticks of West Lompoc, Starch Pressed Sock Co. of Greater Milwaukee
Intergalactic Bizness Makers, co., PO BOX 2, Pilasand, UAE
Re:Lets just give everyone a number.. (Score:2, Funny)
Sounds good in theory, but if the doctors had it thier way, they'd lease you a DHCP address or even worse use PPPoE. Oh and you'd better not be listening for any conversations, you may only initiate them, or you will violate your TOS.
Re:Lets just give everyone a number.. (Score:2)
My social security number is 486-65-4324. I was jealous of my collegue, Bob Andrews, who has 777-66-6667, which is made of only 2 different types of digits AND is PRIME!
Now I know Bob will get a better I.P. address too. Some people... they're just born with everything. Lucky bastards....
Re:Lets just give everyone a number.. (Score:2)
Re:Lets just give everyone a number.. (Score:2)
-website (if accessed through HTTP, etc.)
-ftp site
-email address
-telephone (portable of course)
-mailing address (Post office would do a DNS lookup for your current physical address... no more forwarding!)
It would make it pretty easy to remember ONE number for each person, instead of a separate email, phone, address, etc. Maybe too easy to track someone though...
MadCow
LED museum is much more interesting... (Score:2, Insightful)
I suspect timothy just want a chance to slip in that link to the LED museum, which is much more interesting than the main story
Not surprising.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Perhaps in a few years when VC get eager to dump money around and new startups are made that will start with a
Look at the
.biz (Score:1)
"Honey, go look at that web site that they just talked about.
"Okay."
Fires up AOL
click click click (companyname.biz.com)
"It doesn't work!!" I'll never buy anything from them!"
.com vs .anything else (was Re:.biz) (Score:1)
I have a .com domain that is the same as .co.uk domain. I get large amounts of email for people at the company in the UK. Not only from people outside the organisation (who have typed .com without thinking) but also from people inside the organisation that have registered at web sites with .com instead of .co.uk.
These people don't even know their own email address!
acronyms...gheez (Score:4, Funny)
Re:acronyms...gheez (Score:2)
Re:acronyms...gheez (Score:3, Funny)
"dot.dash.dot" are my initials in morse code.
Re:acronyms...gheez (Score:2)
Still, it would be pretty funny to have http:(slash)(slash)slashdot(dot)dot.
- j
not as sexy (Score:2, Insightful)
Apart from the CC domains which are good for country specific sites these new tld's don't really trip off the tongue that easily either.
So, to summerise my post...
ok. bad post but it is late here ok.
Re:not as sexy (Score:2, Insightful)
You ain't kidding. I have an instant negative gut-level reaction to it. To me the name immediately conjures up images of multi-level marketing schemes, MAKE MONEY FAST scams, and other seedy to-good-to-be-true business ventures.
At this point it is difficult to imagine .biz being a favorite of anyone but infomercial producers and spamware dealers.
they just need cooler TLD's (Score:1)
Re:they just need cooler TLD's (Score:1)
HTTP://MYHOMEPAGEISCOOL!!!!!!!!!!.AOL
http://etc.etc.etc.etc...
and of course the pedos will immediately start punching in
http://hot.nekkid.kids
Ack!
Re:they just need cooler TLD's (Score:1)
>.KIDS ( For kid safe sites only)
>
Yes, because the
Re:they just need cooler TLD's (Score:1)
Re:they just need cooler TLD's (Score:1)
Re:they just need cooler TLD's (Score:1)
What's the point? It's a totally worthless ISP account. The parent's will need their own, so the family internet cost is doubled... and the brats can't evne use it to do homework. I can imagine the sacharrine crap that will be on it, nothing with any real learning value. And on top of that, since it would be commercial in nature, it will be more an entire TLD of advertising to a very narrow demographic, than any resource at all.
Face it, this is a braindead idea. Parent's that want their children to be safe from that evil internet thing should move up to the mountains or something.
Re:they just need cooler TLD's (Score:1)
On second thought, we'd run out of those real quick too.
New dawt Not (Score:2)
The premise of new.net seems to be get enough people pointing their DNS systems to hit your server and you don't need to be in the ICANN root. Problem is that the domains only have a 5% probability of working for a given net user.
I wouldn't give a @#$^^ for new.net except for their paid flacks popping up arroung the net to shill for them. The scam seems to be they get a bunch of tasty names then shill endlessly in an attempt to get the new.net root incorporated into the ICANN one so their tasty names suddenly become worth squillions of dollars.
Re:New dawt Not (Score:1)
No, I take that back. Even more important than free domains and intelligent TLD's, is the campaign to convince people to run their own bind, so that they have control over what they see. Pointing resolv.conf at whatever alternic, and letting them dictate what you see is just asking for trouble.
Re:New dawt Not (Score:2)
If you noticed that the above is somewhat Windows-centric, you're correct...with a system like this, would new.net's domains even be accessible from other systems? If they were cross-platform, they would just stick their DNS server ahead of whatever others you're using, whether in /etc/resolv.conf, TCP/IP properties for whatever NIC you're using, etc.
Combine that with their getting software vendors to bundle the new.net DLL as "foistware" and they can FOAD, for all I care.
Three cheers for the stupid people! (Score:1, Interesting)
No Interest (Score:5, Insightful)
If the .govs and .mils feel like they need to be .coms, why the hell does anyone think actual companies would want anything else? Does anyone here know of any .edus that use .com? I think the .orgs seem to stick to .org pretty well. Come on- if I want info on something, I'll find their site and look for info there, not do a separate .info search.
well .US is a mess, that's why the PD did it (Score:1)
seabrookpd.city.state.us which no one can remember (most peoples eyes glaze over after the 2nd dot) so
Re:well .US is a mess, that's why the PD did it (Score:1)
Re:well .US is a mess, that's why the PD did it (Score:2)
Well, I would hope that anybody in that city would be able to remember at least the ".city.state.us" part of the name. And, in that relatively small namespace, there should be no problem assigning the name "police" to the local police department.
I think the DNS system needs to be re-worked to use deeper sub-domain paths. It just doesn't work to have everybody in the world fighting over a small number of flat namespaces (especially when the holder of a trademark gets to claim that substring in every TLD, past present or future). Adding more TLDs is just making the problem worse.
Here's one possible alternative:
- Each TLD would be a category, like ".com" for businesses, ".org" for non-profit organizations, ".ind" for individual people's homepages, etc. Categories would overlap as little as possible, so that any registrant would clearly "belong" to one of them.
- Most names could not be registered directly within the TLD. Instead, they would be registered at a geographic sub-level corresponding to the scope at which the registering entity existed.
So, a local business "ABC Carpet Cleaning" would be able to register the name "abc-carpet-cleaning.vancouver.bc.ca.com" while a fedarally-incorporated business could register "aircanada.ca.com". A different local business in Toronto could register "abc-carpet-cleaning.toronto.on.ca.com" without creating any conflicts. Businesses that had operations in several countries would be allowed to register in the TLD, like "coca-cola.com".
To save some typing, a user's browser could support an abbreviated notation like "circuitcity_com". The DNS system would first try to match "circuitcity.vancouver.bc.ca.com" (or whatever the user's local context was), and would then look for matches all the way up the tree: "circuitcity.bc.ca.com", "circuitcity.ca.com", "circuitcity.com". If there were multiple matches, a page could pop up asking the user which one he wanted. Frequently visited sites would be in the user's bookmark file anyway, so the length of the name wouldn't be an issue.
Anyway, it's an thought. Maybe somebody already wrote up an RFC on this, or wrote a long essay explaining why it's a stupid idea. I haven't looked.
Re:well .US is a mess, that's why the PD did it (Score:1)
Re:well .US is a mess, that's why the PD did it (Score:2)
The best solution is a mapping: organize sites into a hierarchical, location-driven, context-intelligent system like you describe, and map those to their current domain.
This, of course, has already been done. [yahoo.com]
J.J.
Re:well .US is a mess, that's why the PD did it (Score:2)
Re:well .US is a mess, that's why the PD did it (Score:2)
seabrookpd.city.state.us which no one can remember (most peoples eyes glaze over after the 2nd dot) so
most people can't remember that! the teachers can't remember their own email addys!
How on earth do people remember postal addresses...
also you end up with www.somelongwindedproductdescriptionoradvertising
.gov using a .org (Score:2)
Perhaps, but not all of them belong there either. The city I live in uses a .org: http://www.hamilton-city.org/ [hamilton-city.org].
Re:No Interest (Score:2)
www.army.mil (Score:2)
www.goarmy.com is essentially the recruitment address - it's where they want you to go if you're interested in joining.
The only biz that made sense... (Score:1)
I want.... (Score:1)
was that actually the purpose? (Score:1)
Although I guess if they do become popular, all the dot com's will pull the same legal crap that got them their domain name from those other places when they originally applied??
Kid_A
It is due to protection (Score:1)
Indeed, most of the current problems are due to the authorities perverted and twisted sense of protectionism towards big business trademarks.
The solution to the trademark and domain name problem is hidden by authorities to abridge free speech.
The United States Department of Commerce violates the First Amendment - WIPO.org.uk [wipo.org.uk]
Prestige (Score:1)
It is almost as if the
gus
Nobody knows them (Score:3, Insightful)
Plus, no business would dare register under one of the new TLDs unless they owned the
Re:Nobody knows them (Score:2)
I think this is the biggest reason why these and most subsequent domains are going to be mostly undesirable. The threat of litigation, combined with the fact that most 'good' domains (sans tld suffix) are gone, conspire to make protecting yourself from a cyber-squatter the only good reason to get a (.biz,
Why bother (Score:1)
Anyhow, what with all the 'dot gone bankrupts' and 'dot can't be bothered to cough up $35 again this year for each of the 200 domains I thought would be popular' we're seeing a lot of domains becoming available again.
too many names, too much money (Score:1)
.biz (Score:1)
Country Disemination (Score:2)
In Oz we have
Will this mean that we might have info.au and in.uk or inf.nv ?
What about bi.uk or bi.nz what does that say?
Re:Country Disemination (Score:2)
There is nothing wrong with .biz, but... (Score:2)
In 2-3 years a whole lot of
Some people will keep on cybersquatting, but any domain name worth cybersquatting that's not infringing on trademarks has already been sold.
I'm halfway cybersquatting... I have a couple of domain names that I haven't done anything with other than point them to my servers. I do have plans for both of them though, just have other stuff that has higher priority.
Mod that man up! (Score:2)
I think it people really were desperate for new TLDs then services such as ALTERNIC would be more popular. If the Linux browsers Mozilla and Konqueror were configured by default to also check an alternate nameserver then the Linux community could have fun by inventing their own TLDs which could then be accessed by everyone else in the community (http://news.linux/ anyone?)
Phillip.
Re:Mod that man up! (Score:2)
.biz registration? (Score:2)
To few undesirable TLD's, too late (Score:2, Insightful)
There should have been dozens of TLDs available last year. The old dot com, dot org, and dot net names simply do not sound "right" for many web sites. These measly new offerings are hardly useful.
Identity? (Score:2, Funny)
One of the bigger problems as I see it is companies being forced to buy their
Uniform Dispute Policy, All TLDs The Same (Score:2)
But they don't. Most of the language is oriented to give the name to the trademark holder, with some consideration of wether the respondant is using the domain name or registered it in bad faith. It doesn't matter if you register a .info, and put up a few simple pages with some information about a company... if they have a trademark on the name, the rules (and grim reality of the dispute process) is exactly the same as if it were a .com, .biz, or whatever. There's no consideration written into the dispute policy for wether the respondant chose the correct TLD for their content (assuming they're not just squatting).
Likewise, there was all sorts of talk about registeration in various new TLDs requiring that you show that you really belong in that TLD. Well, it looks like it's all turned into a simple matter of paying money to the registars (the more you pay, the better the chance of being picked to receive the desired name, regardless of wether it may be appropriate for you to host a site within that TLD).
Re:Uniform Dispute Policy, All TLDs The Same (Score:2)
There's even provisions for allowing your registration even when it specifically collides with a valid trademark claim, as long as you are registering your name, nickname or something close to it.
(ObDisclaimer: I work for GNR, the company that operates .name)
Re:Uniform Dispute Policy, All TLDs The Same (Score:2)
I'm still upset that .org isn't reserved for oranisations and not-for-profit groups anymore, that .net is being used by non network providers [canoemuseum.net] and .com is one of the only available TLDs for people to get personally.
What I believe we really need is to replace the domain name system with a keyword system; I know, I know, AOL comes to mind.
However, wouldn't: "person Michael Babcock" be a nice way to find the list of people who registered that "keyword domain"? How about "company Redhat" or something like "company [linux]" to get all names containing "Linux"?
DNS was designed, quite obviously, for a one-to-one relationship between companies/sites/individuals and names. This relationship can still be maintained using DNS, but superceded by maintained keyword indexes (as a dmoz [dmoz.com] extension?). There are many companies by certain names; apc.com wasn't held by American Power Conversion for a long time (who had to register apcc.com) because another company or group also has the initials APC. Name dispute resolution would still exist, but we wouldn't need to worry about telling someone they couldn't use a common word for their keyword name just because another company uses it as their trademark.
Implementation is another discussion, but I use Alexa's keyword system and Yahoo's indexes [yahoo.com] a lot more often than I use domain names to find companies and individuals.
New TLD for PORNO! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:.biz does not properly portray a sersious busin (Score:2, Funny)
simple solution: (Score:2)
Re:These could be useful (Score:3, Insightful)
Com.yahoo.www would then be in the same order as the directory structure (/dir/subdir/.../file.html); most general to most specific. Right now, hostnames are inverted relative to the directory tree.
Re:These could be useful (Score:2)
And for Star Trek fans (Score:2)
.47
.klingon
.rom (.romulan?)