.us Domains Coming in 2002 261
marnanel writes "Perhaps it had to happen eventually: the .us top-level domain has been transferred to a private company, NeuStar. One of the most interesting effects of this is that second-level domains, such as foo.us, will be available for the first time, instead of the existing hierarchical county.state.us system." But not until mid 2002.
Finally (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Finally (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Finally (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Finally (Score:3, Funny)
kinda like if you remember when NSI wouldn't let people register domains with swears in them... (like the "f" word), so someone registered .off.com.....
I'm just wondering what lucky porn site is gonna get fuck.us
Re:Finally (Score:2)
Unfortunately, it won't be put to any good use. Some waste of sperm will toss up a porno clusterfuck page, with unending pop-up windows when you try to close it. I'd rather see it used for something amusing.
BFD. (Score:4, Insightful)
On the upside for NeuStar, they are sure to make a fortune from all the companies sick of getting into lawsuits over this sort of thing and buy thier
How about an email address at ... (Score:1, Funny)
or
sue.us
us domain jokes (Score:1)
.org.us (Score:1, Interesting)
.edu and .gov (Score:4, Insightful)
Since they are only used by the US governement and US schools, i think they should be moved to
Just my thoughts..
-J
Re:.edu and .gov (Score:1)
also, in the name of simplicity i think we should keep things as they are: established and shorter than the proposed change.
Re:.edu and .gov (Score:2)
Re:.edu and .gov (Score:1)
Faulklands worth invading???? (Score:2)
hawk
Re:.edu and .gov (Score:1)
Re:.edu and .gov (Score:1)
Since they are only used by the US governement and US schools
There is at least one non-US .edu domain: mm.edu. .gov is quite US-only, though.
But it's strange that this happens now, when most other national top-domain has lost their "national" feeling, with USians controlling domains like .nu where a lot of Swedish companies (and even branches of the government) have sites (since "nu" means "now" in Swedish).
Oh, well, perhaps we'll see non-US domains under .us? That would be the perfect retribution...
Re:.edu and .gov (Score:1, Flamebait)
Plus, non-US organizations are free to use the non-country specific TLDs. Check out london.edu, nokia.com, or un.org.
Re:.edu and .gov (Score:1)
Re:.edu and .gov (Score:2, Insightful)
I think that the good people at CERN would disagree with that statement.
You're thinking of Tim's development of the Web. The Interent and the Web are not synonymous.
1Alpha7
Re:.edu and .gov (Score:1)
Re:.edu and .gov (Score:1)
While the US DID invent
Europe DID invent latin and greek letters.
Without us you would have to write your domains in babylonian, hebrew or chinese letters.
BTW, we hold all copyrights for the latin and greek alphabet, so start rolling the money over or stop using our IP !
Ignorance check! (Score:2)
> world series loving Americans, more then one country.
uh, check on what the "World Series" is . . .
It does *not* mean "world champion," and never did.
"World" was the name of the now defunct newspaper that schemed to get the champions of the two major professional baseball leagues to play each other. They slapped their name on it. The event and its name have outlasted the paper by decades . . .
hawk
US TLD linked at the hip to BIZ TLD (Score:2, Interesting)
In other words, if you don't accept the ICANN version of
Re:US TLD linked at the hip to BIZ TLD (Score:1, Interesting)
Just what we need (Score:1)
All these domains do is make things more complicated for those of us who have to remember all these web addresses and more expensive for companies trying to protect their trademarks in cyberspace. Maybe we should REDUCE the number of domains... From now on let's just just
Re:Just what we need (Score:1)
I got "r" and "are" (Score:1)
Squatters.r.us
Re:I got "r" and "are" (Score:1)
Re:I got "r" and "are" (Score:2)
Since you also mentioned two-letter domain names in your post as being verboten, what about Hewlett-Packard [hp.com] or Texas Instruments [ti.com]? (You need the "www." in front of them, though, to access their websites. General Motors [gm.com], OTOH, works without the "www.")
I had "z" (Score:2, Interesting)
I was the first to register Z.COM. IANA once gave a directive that said, "all one-letter names shall be reserved to enable name-hashing at a later time". Working for a company that registered domain names on a daily basis, I thought, "If X.ORG can have a domain name, why can't I register Z.COM?" To my surprise, it worked! The following month, IANA gobbled up all the rest of the one-letter names.
A few years later, I started having people knock on my door monthly saying they'd buy or trade my domain. They didn't see much of a value to it, and neither did I. While I was a bit altruistic, I did have a price in mind where I'd do away with my domain. One day this guy offered me 50% more than that price, so I took it. It went toward a down payment on a house that later made me some real money.
The guy tried to make a simple Z.COM web portal out of it. Their gimmick was that all one had to do was hit "z" on their web browser address, and poof, there you were at Z.COM. The portal never gained momentum.
Other people bought it from him and tried again to make a portal out of it, but their gimmick was to give "lifetime" e-mail accounts if they visited the portal regularly. Again, another Z.COM portal failed, and those "lifetime" addresses disappeared with it.
The next purchaser was apparently IDEAlab. They never did anything with it and with their financial demise probably thought they should sell/dump it for whatever they could.
Enter Nissan. My guess is that they might release or re-release a "Z" car in the future.
I mildly regret selling the name away. I thought the purchaser would have done something better with it. I could give Nissan a web redirect as good as anyone else.
--
Eric Z iegast
eric@z.com
uunet!z!eric
Re:I got "r" and "are" (Score:2)
Q is Qwest's ticker symbol. I'd assume that TI and GM are their symbols as well, though HP's is HWP, so...
OK, so there wasn't *really* a point.
:)
Other domain suggestions: (Score:1)
or
theshortb.us for archival of all score 1 posts.
and
RIAA.us, MPAA.us and FUCK.us, because after all they are 4-letter words meaning the same thing, right?
(I suppose that TLD in this case would mean Top Level Dicks...but I digress....)
Re:Other domain suggestions:..oops (Score:1)
dang, should have been (less than symbol) 1 posts.....
Looks like I'll be the owner of the shortb.us domain...
Whatever.us? (Score:1)
If not who will get screw.us? A p0rn site or another "name your price" e-tailer site??
Some ideas... (Score:2)
long.live.the.us
you.missed.the.b.us
time.to.disc.us/s
come.to.us
visit.us
screw.us
i.hate.the.us
Okay, that's enough...
so.. (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:so.. (Score:2)
So? Spam them back as www.screw.eu!
Re:so.. (Score:1)
<sigh>
--
Every normal man must be tempted, at times, to spit on his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin slitting throats.
-- H. L. Mencken
"Funny" domains coming up... (Score:2)
http://toys.are.us
Any other funny URL predictions?
.asm (Score:3, Interesting)
These domain names were just brain farts, i do not support acts of terrorism.
Re:.asm (Score:1)
Get http://www.orga.sm quick. It's still available.
Re:.asm [a bit OT, watch out] (Score:1)
From their registration rules:
B.0.1 Identification
The domain name that is requested for the registration of an entity must neither be misleading nor obscure. San Marino RA can inform the applicant about possible ambiguities and ask for a changed application.
NOTE: The domain name that is chosen for the registration must be similar to the applicant entity name or it must be similar to one of its services, products, trade-marks and so on in order to assure an easy identification of the name itself.
So, unless your last name is Orga, or own a company that's called that way, you're not gonna get it from them.
Dunno about sex sites though: "So what do you sell?", "Well, we provide people with orga's, don't know what they are?"
Competition for AskJeeves? (Score:2, Redundant)
.us domain: (Score:3, Funny)
finally (Score:4, Insightful)
Now if only
/Erik
Re:finally (Score:1)
Yeah, and reserve .gov for the future world governement, and .mil for the global military that will defend us from evil Borgs...
Re:finally (Score:1)
Who let the optimist in here? (Score:3, Insightful)
First, we've have a top level domain like all the other contries have had -- each with their own rules and rulers -- it's just that ours were outstandingly misguided.
However, I have little confidence that the new ones will be any better. In any event, there is no chance that <big-american-corp> is going to give up <big-american-corp>.com -- they'll just have <big-american-corp>.com.us too -- wheeee, won't that be special!
Re:finally (Score:1)
/Erik
Weird (Score:1)
Hmmm, obviously I know less about the history of the DNS than I thought I did
Everytime this comes up on nanog, I tend to glaze over. I should pay more attention, I know...
*.co.us isn't what you think it is... (Score:2)
Re:Weird (Score:1)
Open to Afghans? (Score:4, Funny)
please.stop.bombing.us
(will it be Funny or Flamebait?)
Knunov
Re:Open to Afghans? (Score:1)
Re:Open to Afghans? (Score:1)
Re:Open to Afghans? (Score:1)
Re:Open to Afghans? (Score:1)
Please try a different name, or press Here for help.
Is this really that important? (Score:1)
Re:Is this really that important? (Score:1)
Unfortunately, .com and friends is much too polluted to be able to make that distinction. But then again, so are most the national domains as well, so I don't really see why this would be any better.
Perhaps we should just scrap the current DNS system and create a new domain structure from scratch? That would be something...
Wow. (Score:2, Interesting)
Then again, because certain municipalities were delegated to various ISP's it wasn't necessarily free... in Richmond, VA i2020.net wanted $200 per year for mydomain.richmond.va.us. This was only after 6 hours on the phone, trying to convince various people there that they had it delegated to them...
Maybe I take these things too seriously, but it makes me sick just thinking about it.
Fair. (Score:1, Flamebait)
I always thought it's fair that US companies register themselves as .com without .country sufix. It's fair because internet has born in US.
But ITOH every country has its own sufix and US has none. Now each country has its own sufix and also can register a "country-sufix-less" domain. It's much more fair to everybody.
Well, it's good to have .us domains, for me it sounds that www is becoming much more world than web.
Re:Fair. (Score:2)
I always thought it's fair that US companies register themselves as .com without .country sufix. It's fair because internet has born in US.
That's not how it's set up. .com is for companies. No mention of them being US, just commercial. If you want a regional domain for the us, use .us.
Re:Fair. (Score:2)
Here in brazil governmental sites uses .gov.br what about in US? It's .gov and not .gov.us.
That's what I meant. Not only to commercial sites, but also for government, educational, etc
Re:Fair. (Score:1)
I've always thought of .com/net/org as a international/US domain. Not just US. I think it would be good to have a .us. .coms are being used as an interational suffex. Even though a site may not be based in the US, they might have a .com to show that they are expect an international audiance.
It's as if the
Sometimes is's even sillier, like when people get somethingNZ.com, and don't even bother to get something.co.nz or somethingNZ.co.nz. When the site is clearly supposed to be local.
So, don't think that MS or Canon, IBM, even slashdot (any big company, or location irrelivent sites) will be getting a .com.us for their main domain anytime soon. But maybe walmart.com.us might appear (or any other US only places).
(Sigh) (Score:4, Insightful)
You could also have
Still, one positive feature of the new setup is that there won't be artificial scarcity created underneath the
(Possible new business for Sealand: lawyer-proof
Re:(Sigh) (Score:3, Informative)
Umm.
Re:(Sigh) (Score:2)
I think the big secret about the TLD system is that it isn't pefect, but it works as well as any other system would. Your system would not stop the lawsuits due to trademark confusion just because someone registered it as mcdonalds.fcfs.com instead of mcdonalds.tm.com. The only real problem with the DSN system is that it is hard to get the exact name you want. But that is going to be the case with any number of TLDs I believe, because people will buy them up either way.
Making people prove they deserve a domain is even worse....it takes time, and would be an anchor on the internet. I don't want to have to wait 2 weeks to get some pinhead to approve my registration application.
Unfortunately, big corporations have an advantage over an individual. Such is life.
Re:(Sigh) (Score:2)
I agree, but some people will try to inflict PITA bureaucracy whether you ask for it or not. Witness the arbitration system for .com (guinessbeersucks.com, gateway.com and so on).
My suggestion was aimed at keeping these people in a contained space. They can have their legally regulated .tm and .com domains - where the rules are clear and explicit, and not as arbitrary as the current system - and everyone else can use .fcfs for first come, first served.
(Sigh) Ignorance must be bliss (Score:2)
It's so easy to be sure of oneself when ignorant.
Exactly which "Olympia" gets that olympia.us? Olympia Pizza down the street from me? One of the 1,000 other unrelated Olympia Pizza's across the US? Olympia Cruise Lines? Olympia Finance Corporation? Matt Olympia?
What about trademarks? NT goes to Microsoft or to Nortel (nee Northern Telecom)? What about the dozens of other trademarked NT's in various fields? NT adhesive or NT car parts?
Sigh - Ignorance must be bliss.
Re:(Sigh) Ignorance must be bliss (Score:2)
Re:(Sigh) Ignorance must be bliss (Score:2)
For
Re:(Sigh) Ignorance must be bliss (Score:2)
Tnus you need geographic parts (which is what exists now) and most likely "type" parts of the name. Certainly you need those for trademarks.
What about trademarks? NT goes to Microsoft or to Nortel (nee Northern Telecom)?
Most likely domains for companies should be restricted to legal or trading names. Rather than those of products. Also Nortel is a Canadian company IIRC.
and where do personal sites belong? (Score:2)
Where are the little guys supposed to go? they're not
Maybe this will get your collective minds going (Score:2)
Re:Maybe this will get your collective minds going (Score:2)
grep us\$ /usr/share/dict/words
You may wish to pipe the output into less, or redirect it into a file.
Re:Maybe this will get your collective minds going (Score:2)
And what this means is: (Score:3, Flamebait)
The last bit of organization associated with United States centric domain name organization is gone.
It sucked when .net, .org, and .com were relegated to equals rather than their intended purpose.
Now .us will just be the same.
The evolution of things? It's like this:
1. In the beginning, commercial companies who were not network infrastructure providers could only register .com, thus leaving .org and .net free for nonprofit orgs and network providers.
2. Bill Clinton came along and gave the internet to the corporations, and suddenly U.S. companies registered their names in .com, .net, and .org. Thus, using even more namespace.
3. .biz comes along, and those same companies will now have FOUR names in the namespace.
4. Now .us will be exactly the same. Now those companies will just have mytrademark.com, mytrademark.net, mytrademark.org, mytrademark.biz, and NOW mytrademark.us.
So, can anyone tell me what good this move is, rather than making them register under county.state.us?
Anyone else remember when domain names were free and you never got spam on usenet or e-mail? It was the giving up of .org and .net brought about by Clinton-Gore that got us where we are today.
When Gore "invented" the internet, what he and Clinton invented was the destruction of it's beauty as a free exchange that wasn't dominated by giant corporations wielding laws like the DMCA.
Re:And what this means is: (Score:1)
The move was afoot long before Bill and Al came in.
Re:And what this means is: (Score:2)
Not just their names but also names of their products, even advertising slogans and misspellings. Also quite a few things ended up as
Yes, I remeber the net of the 70's (Score:2)
I have to assume, however, that you do not.
If you did you would be aware that the changes in the net that the original poster was bemoaning have nothing, I will repeat, emphatically, NOTHING, to do with technology.
They are all strictly factors orginizational, politcal and legal. They are *human* changes, and thus behavioural.
Thus, the proper tools for change and improvement are the tools of human interaction. Debate and disent being chief among these.
If I might paraphrase Linus Torvalds, if you wish to actually say something of value to the issue, show me the argument.
KFG
But will they be used? (Score:2)
I can imagine that some large companies will get the domain, simply to "collect the whole set", but do you seriously imagine that you will start to see adds for www.ibm.us on the billboards? I just simply don't see it happening.
Although i would like to see who ends up with trust.us ;-)
Re:But will they be used? (Score:2)
To the Great Unwashed Masses, the only domain worth knowing about is ".com". I was trying to set up a "Reply-To" line for my SprintPCS mail. When I called their tech support, I was told that my email address <xxxxx@xxxxx.chi.il.us> was invalid 'cause it didn't end in ".com"! *sigh*
If it doesn't start with "www." and end with ".com", the muggles just can't cope with it.
NEUSTAR CAN KISS MY (Score:2, Interesting)
The
The United States is a LARGE, well-connected country. It is NOT practical to give 2nd-level domains (joeblow.us) out to the public. The system of org.locality.state.us is much more fair as there will be less disputes. Granted, companies and organizations that span more than one locality or state should be allowed to have lower-level (3rd or maybe 2nd) domains.
I emailed Neustar (that is the stupidest name of a company I have ever heard) last week about some of these issues I am concerned about, and never received a response.
As a
Overly confusing? (Score:3, Informative)
This also leads to another problem. Smaller sites don't want to have to manage two extentions (for the sake of costs and fragmentation). A few poltically-correct people will start typing in
Here's a scenaraio:
Small US based business with a website, does no international business. Clearly, Company X shouldn't have to buy a
Once the site has been up and popularized, a potential customer hears about the site; oxygenrx. He types oxygenrx.com into his browser... 404:not found. The potential customer releases a string of obcenities, then proceeds to a competitor's site. The opposite of this is true as well.
The obvious solution to this problem would be to buy a
Another way to put this into perspective is with the naming of a company.
For example, there is a company: Brooklyn Cheese House inc. From the name, you can tell it is strictly a small local business. One day, the managment changes it's name to Cheese House International. But, it's not an international business: it's still a small retail store in Brooklyn. Surely this will confuse customers (probably those who choose to patronize a local business over a large one). Same concept with the domains: a proper name prevents confusion and improves business.
Of course, this can't all be credited to the lateness in the availability of
Re:Overly confusing? (Score:2)
Utterly wrong, it was invented by a British man at CERN (an international organisation based in Europe.)
Take a great system... (Score:1)
BEWARE (Score:2)
Should've been from the start! (Score:5, Interesting)
It should have been this way right from the start. Every country should have its country code as its top level domain, and that should be subdivided as best convenient for that country. In the U.S., each state would be assigned a 2-letter name under .us, and that state would be responsible for subdividing further. A big state like California might subdivide further by counties.
It should never have been simply "something.com"--this may have actually helped lead to the .com mess of the past several years, which has screwed up the tech sector so badly. ("Hey! Here's a business idea! Better register that domain name NOW before someone gets it, write up some press releases, and we're millionaires!" It's all psychology. Make the system more organized and its users will have to be too.) From the very start, people would have gotten used to the fact that some company's domain name is something.county.state.us or something.city.state.us or whatever. (Subdividing by city actually makes more sense (to me) than by county, as your snailmail address includes your street address, city and state, not your county.)
Furthermore, .net, .com and .org should only have existed for international entities; .net being for network providers; .com for multinational commercial entities and .org for multinational nonprofit organizations. ONLY! These domains, and only these domains, would be regulated by some international mess of a bureaucracy. Their rules would include a minimum number of countries you have to do business in before getting a domain like that. For example, you must do so many millions worth of business in, say, 10 countries in order to get a .com.
When limited to the U.S., these entities would have to get a .com.state.us address, and the name must be the name of the business (or entity). Registered trademarks would get a .tm.us. Federal government sites would get a .gov.us. State governments would get a .gov.state.us. County and city governments would be further organized in a hierarchy.
In short, by using rules that make sense to KNOWLEDGEABLE computer folks, a very large mess wouldn't exist now. Huge technical problems would be reduced to nothing. Legal problems would nearly go away too--we wouldn't have people fighting over domain names and stupid stuff like that. (If there was a fight, it could only happen between people in the same city (or state in the worst case) and there would be no authority to handle it--all names are first-come-first-serve. (The protection is already in place, since you have to own the appropriate trademark or have the appropriately named business in order to have that domain name.) And if all else fails, one party could buy the name off the other, as was done in the past.)
The way the system is today causes another big HUGE chunk of bureaucracy that is totally unnecessary and costs a lot of money and headaches. OH WELL.
Yes yes, it already was, but got ignored (Score:2)
Web-era veterans might remember Netherlands BBS, originally at netherlands.ypsi.mi.us ('ypsi.mi' because it was located in Ypsilanti, Michigan). Eventually it was changed to nether.net. This of course worked in NetherNet's favor, because they then had a shorter hostname, and users did less typing, and there was much rejoicing.
Regardless, the current system is hardly bureaucratic -- its the opposite, uncontrolled and manipulated for profit over most beneficial function. And the solution of throwing more TLDs at the problem will only end up spanning the problem across TLDs. Sure, ICANN tells the TLD applicants who were lucky to win their lottery disguised as a review process that they have to limit who can get domains under their TLDs, but if ICANN's pattern of bending to commercial pressure continues, I expect that rule to hold for two years max.
Without a high-level directory, it was inevitable. (Score:2)
The problem is that the directory technology never matured fast enough, and was never adopted globally enough for it to serve that purpose. We're just now getting LDAP to start serving in the capacity of an e-mail directory, but short of the numerous incompatible search engines and proprietary "keyword" services out there, nothing has been able to do the same thing to sit above the DNS layer in a sane fashion.
If things had turned out the way they should have, DNS space wouldn't be traded like such a huge commodity, and we wouldn't have everybody and their freakin' pets with their own domain space sitting right off the top-level domains like we do today. It would end up as a nice hierarchy, but nobody but the techies would even care because it's not something generally exposed to the public. It's just ridiculous the way things are today.
Another poster mentioned that having his identity associated with a geographical domain name would suck since he'd have to rename everything when he moved. If things had been done right, this wouldn't really be an issue. The only naming that would need to change would be the naming of the Internet hosts that would move with him. If he was using a geographically-identified ISP and moved, he'd probably need to get a new ISP anyway, so his e-mail address would have changed. If he was hosting his own e-mail on his geographically-identified hosts, his hosts would have to move with him, so not only would he have to renumber, but yah, he'd have to rename as well. This really wouldn't have been as bad as it seems, since a higher-level directory would be what's linking his name and identity with his e-mail address, so after changing the address, a quick trip to the directory's update function would still allow him to receive his e-mail.
I really don't see a huge problem with the top-level generic domains like
But who knows, this may force a globally-recognized directory of proper names to services. As the number of "equivalent" top-level domain names increase, so does the ambiguity. Users are going to start using search engines more to locate an organization, which I see is a good thing, and the overall value of DNS space will begin to diminish.
Things will get there eventually, but many of us will be banging our heads on our desks in the mean time...
Corruption of US DoC (Score:2)
The United Nations World Intellectual Property Organization and the United States Department of Commerce are hiding the simple solution to trademark and domain name problem.
Virtually every word is trademarked - Alpha to Zeta or Aardvark to Zulu, most many times over (even in same country).
Trademarks are for the good of the people, as well as business. Most trademarks share the same words with many others in a different business and/or country. For example, 'cat' is used in 1746 trademarks in the USA alone. The authorities are allowing certain trademarks to be abused by their owners, giving them dominance over others. This is against unfair competition law.
The US DoC do this purposefully, also knowing they abridge peoples right to use these words - even the common words you learnt with your A B C's - like apple, ball and cat. This violates the First Amendment.
I have been in contact with various Government bodies (US and UK) and attorneys for quite some time now - they understand arguments perfectly. Nobody has denied the assertions made, not even UN WIPO.
Like I say, most trademarks share its name or initials with many others. When authorities could put trademark identity beyond shadow of doubt, they are either devoid of intelligence or corrupt. I have come to the logical conclussion, that they are corrupt.
Please visit WIPO.org.uk [wipo.org.uk] to see the simple solution.
Why is this good? (Score:2)
Suppose someone registers ibm.com.ru who isn't IBM. Suppose that country doesn't care about that person infringing on IBM's trademark? Now suppose someone in that country assumes ibm.com.ru is the country-specific site for IBM. What is IBM's country specific site is ru.ibm.com (which is how I think it SHOULD be). I can definitely see a problem here.
Does IBM register EVERY IBM.com.TLD as well as IBM.com? Should they have to do so? Seems ridiculous to me. TLDs should say something about the type/business of a company (which they no longer do) instead of stressing location. Furthermore, things will get muddier as the managing bodies decide to do force stupid things later on for "more organization" like "company.businesstype.city.state.country". Type rather than location isn't perfect, but it's BETTER than what is being proposed.
What we need are BETTER TLDs.
.media - for TV, Radio, Newspapers, and the like
.isp - for ISPs, since the
.retail - for retail businesses like Amazon, Sears, B&N, etc.
.pr0n - you get the idea
.linux - of course!
and, of course, some sort of governing body which FORCES the general business of the company to be related to the domain, or else forfeit their domain name (after a reasonable appeals process, of course). The existing
Re:Why is this good? (Score:2)
Timely (Score:2)
Now it's just a press release. Press Releases for Nerds, Stuff That Mattered Last Month.
Re:/.us (Score:1)
Re:Ack. (Score:2)
I'm not quite sure what the point of your post was, but assuming you think that online voting is a bad thing because of the above... well sir/ma'am, I guess we should outlaw telephones, too. They've been used countless times to defraud people who should know better into giving up personal information.
Then again, these days ignorance IS a legitimate excuse for stupidity. Sigh...
Re:I am pervert! (Score:2)
//rdj
Punishment. (Score:2)
Hey, what did I do?
(Thanks for the idea, though. Hmmm.)
--saint
Re:Seriously (Score:2)
ICANN dosn't enforce any use of country domains. Only few of them, like
Re:Why not localize the browsers instead? (Score:2)
You certainly don't dial the US country code to make a US to US call, neither should you do it for the web.
Might I remind you that the US country code is '1' and you dial it every time you make a long-distance call...