ICANN Approves Two More Top-Level Domains 305
Cpyder writes "ICANN has decided to go forward with the implementation of two new top level domains, namely .mobi (for mobile use, sponsored by Nokia and T-Mobile) and .jobs (for job sites).
The ICANN Board meetings regarding the approval are available. It is not yet known when these domains will be available for registration, as this decision merely starts the technical and business negotiations for terms under which these domains will be registered. Normally the domains should become active somewhere next year.
Several other new TLDs are still up for discussion. These include .asia, .mail, .tel and .xxx.
Last October, ICANN approved .travel and .post. More on these new TLDs at PCWorld and Google News."
Death of the . but Keywords live on (Score:5, Interesting)
Now we'll have whitehouse.gov - the real one, whitehouse.com - the sexy one, whitehouse.mobi - while Clinton was sleeping on the couch, whitehouse.sux - advocate site for the Whitehouse, whitehouse.net - no not Watergate, whitehouse.letsmakeanewdotextentiontomakemoremone
Have you noticed that people have already ceased using www. on most advertisements? At least my domain the www is optional, as most other websites have adopted this too.
Re:Death of the . but (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Death of the . but Keywords live on (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Death of the . but Keywords live on (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeah, its called Google [google.com]
The very fact... (Score:2)
Re:Death of the . but Keywords live on (Score:3, Interesting)
A lot of this drop has to do with the language. In Germany, I still hear "vay vay vay punkt irgendwas punkt day eh" where in the US, it takes about three weeks to stumble through "double-you double-you double-you dot something dot com". It's mostly because the professional speakers hate to pronounce the "w" incorrectly and sound like a
Steve? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Steve? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Steve? (Score:2)
Shouldn't that kind of site be registered under .ho ?
Re:Steve? (Score:2)
Re:Steve? (Score:2)
Re:Steve? (Score:2)
Can you discriminate based on names?
I dunno, maybe you have a bunch of shirts with those little ovals that have "Steve" already embroidered on 'em.
Maybe I am that stupid. (Score:3, Funny)
Next I will go visit http://whack.jobs and see if my picture has made it to the contributor-of-the-month spot!
I'd be more curious (Score:2)
Just wondering if they'd just let someone specific register
Re:I'd be more curious (Score:2)
(although I assume the
.mobi? why the i? (Score:2)
Re:.mobi? why the i? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:.mobi? why the i? (Score:5, Funny)
What, they wanted more than just ".gov"? Greedy bastards!
Oh, you must have meant the corporate organized crime folks, unhappy with the progressive dilution of ".com".
Okay, gotcha, I see the idea now.
Re:.mobi? why the i? (Score:2, Funny)
For example, i could register the following domains:
i-want-an.orgi
you-are-a-filthy.comi
lets-get.bizi
Re:.mobi? why the i? (Score:2)
thank you, thank you, I'll be here all week
pathetic
Re:.mobi? why the i? (Score:2)
For Mobiles... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:For Mobiles... (Score:2)
needs inforcement (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:needs inforcement (Score:2)
My personal feeling is that everyone is still going to buy the
Although it would be ironic to make slashdot.org give up the
Re:needs inforcement (Score:3, Insightful)
Monster.jobs of course!
The practical reason why you would want more TLDs is to help people find stuff and offload the
To make this work you would have to stop using the
Problem: Lawyers will prevent that.
Even the pr0n sites would want to keep their
The whole
Re:needs inforcement (Score:2)
Re:needs inforcement (Score:5, Insightful)
actually no..
should we start making top level domains for every new device that comes out? that's not how the internet works... you have a user agent profile and user agent string that every device sends to your web server, and that is how that should be handled, not with a top level domain name.
should there be
the
But what's the correct domain for me? (Score:2)
Personally, I'm fine with a free-for-all on most TLDs. The only ones that seem to have been enforced, and thus seem worth keeping, are edu and mil.
Re:But what's the correct domain for me? (Score:2)
For USA: yoursite.[yourcounty].[yourstate].us
Actually, now that they've opened up the US domain, you can go straight for [yoursite].us
Plus, state/county subdomains are usually free (included in your tax dollars) for residents of that jurisdiction.
Re:needs inforcement (Score:2)
.TLDs (Score:2)
To me this seems like nothing more than an attempt to make money revenue for all parties involved.
Re:.TLDs (Score:2)
I'd have to agree here. For me, the URL "seems" more legit if it uses one of the standard TLDs or a country one (such as co.uk.) Then again, I pretty much have my set sites that I visit and don't venture outside of thosethat much.
I get mobi... (Score:3, Interesting)
.mobi unsafe at any speed says TB-L (Score:3, Interesting)
.
A separate domain for mobile device access is directly contrary of what the W3C is working towards with web standards.
Says Tim Berners-Lee [infosyncworld.com].
Uhhh (Score:2)
Re:Uhhh (Score:2)
For unemployed porn stars... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:For unemployed Scammers... (Score:2)
Re:For unemployed porn stars... (Score:2)
.mobi? (Score:3, Interesting)
I still dont (Score:4, Insightful)
I still lose credability for a site if it is
Call me Ishmael ... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Call me Ishmael ... (Score:2)
regular expression validation, (Score:3, Informative)
Need a change... (Score:2, Interesting)
Maybe we can solicit an "Ask Slashdot" question about alternatives to the TL
Re:Need a change... (Score:2)
Brad Templeton has written a lot on the subject http://www.templetons.com/brad/dns/ [templetons.com]
-- Should you believe authority without question?
Time warp! (Score:2)
Wait, do you mean light years?
Next up - .bob (Score:5, Funny)
WHY? WHY? WHY? (Score:5, Insightful)
I can think of dice.jobs, guru.jobs, and hot.jobs and not a whole lot else. What does that do to effectively partition the .com uber-TLD?
Re:WHY? WHY? WHY? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:WHY? WHY? WHY? (Score:2)
Re:WHY? WHY? WHY? (Score:2)
Re:WHY? WHY? WHY? (Score:2)
See .biz
Re:WHY? WHY? WHY? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:WHY? WHY? WHY? (Score:2)
Not that I think this justifies the extra TLD, but just recognizing that there could be some benefit to this, at least for large, well-known companies (who else are we supposed to have benefit, after all?)
Of course, the big (public) companies ought to be making plans for
Re:WHY? WHY? WHY? (Score:2)
What's wrong with "jobs.ibm.com"?
Excellent (Score:2)
This is a very good thing. It will keep the chaff occupied with the mistaken idea that by spamming resumes to the world [spamnews.com] is the perfect way to get a job.
Meanwhile, those of us who know how to get in the door without relying on a CV (in word format, only!) will already be negotiating salary & benes while the unwashed monkies are clapping their hands when they receive the
Re:WHY? WHY? WHY? (Score:3, Funny)
nut.jobs
outsourcing.jobs
rim.jobs
Re:WHY? WHY? WHY? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:WHY? WHY? WHY? (Score:3, Informative)
Cuz ya know, we have to think of the children.
TLDs are Losing Their Meaning (Score:5, Insightful)
There was time when TLD meant something. You knew a .com was a company, a .org was a non-profit, a .net was service provider etc. Now a .org or .net can be any old profit-driven site selling anything. All these new TLDs are just pointless. .mobi?
And they're not domains anymore. They're vanity plates. A domain used to mean a bunch of computers that were connected and administered as a group. Now, it's a website.
I'm afraid it's just going to get more confusing.
Expanded TLDs already meaningless (Score:4, Insightful)
The intended purpose of expanding the namespace by adding new TLDs is both not necessary with the death of squatting and speculating as well as testy trademark holders lining up to register their names in any possible new TLDs, thus creating a scarcity in "good" 2nd level domain names in any new general purpose TLDs anyway.
And its not like there are a bunch of organizations suddenly willing to abandon 2LD in "the big three" for a new TLD in something nobody knows or understands; at best they might register their existing 2LD in the new TLD if it was 100% spot-on accurate (eg, monster.jobs, for example).
Nor are there a bunch of organizations saying "Gee, we have TLD that kind of matches our organization, maybe it's time to get on the intranets."
The only reason I can see ICANN releasing new TLDs is to raise money by selling the "management rights" to a bunch of Verisign wannabees, who if they have any brains, will just sell out to Verisign's monopoly as soon as they can.
But this strategy will only work a few more times for ICANN, because soon Verisign won't be interested in buying complete control of TLDs by proxy once the market is diluted enough.
Re:TLDs are Losing Their Meaning (Score:2)
I have never understood this claim. RFC 1032 [faqs.org] defined the ORG TLD in this way:
Is there something else that designated the .org TLD as reserved for non-profit purposes?
Re:TLDs are Losing Their Meaning (Score:2)
"ORG" exists as a parent to subdomains that do not clearly fall within the other top-level domains. This may include technical- support groups, professional societies, or similar organizations.
Is there something else that designated the
Simple... because if you were there to generate profit you were a commercial entity as defined by the
Re:TLDs are Losing Their Meaning (Score:2)
just what we need... (Score:2)
PCB32
Re:just what we need... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:just what we need... (Score:2)
OpenNIC (Score:4, Informative)
Re:OpenNIC (Score:2)
wtf?
Am I too late... (Score:2)
Re:Am I too late... (Score:2)
Why truncate? (Score:2)
Natural Extension TLD (Score:2)
Which is just a lead-in for the quietly planned
Classic classification mistake (Score:5, Insightful)
Having the top level domain suffix be so specific is just a horribly simplistic way of trying to classify websites. Also, why can't they realize that the website owners themselves don't really want it. It just multiplies the number of domains you have to register in order to prevent confusion and squatters.
If they want to fix something real, then how about the problem of all those domain names out there that have been registered simply to display a stupid "search page", with a message saying "this domain is for sale". I seem to remember in the early 1990's that if you didn't use a domain for a "valid purpose" then it simply got returned to the pool. It irritates me no end to think of a domain and check its availability, only to find some asshat registered it for no purpose but to sit on it and hope to squeeze some money out of someone who really wants to use it.
If we were to free up all THOSE domains then that would be a helluva lot more useful to the internet than new TLDs. And isn't ICAAN sposed to be looking after the interests of the internet, rather than simply representing business interests?
Not again... *sigh* (Score:2)
Is there any research being done to replace this mess with something better, maybe a 1:1 system for domain names, which would make things tidy again? Some other domain "format" / system?
With the system of today, IMHO even
Top Level Domains Are Good... (Score:2)
VC phone home (Score:3, Interesting)
What the hell is ICANN doing endorsing two private companies in the root domain servers? Is the control of mobile devices now to be defined by these two partnering competitors in the vastly important mobile communications industry, on behalf of the global public supposedly served by ICANN? Now we see why it takes ICANN so long to approve domains: telcos take time to complete their bribe negotiations with such a distributed organization of crooks as ICANN. Maybe I can bootstrap a deal with Larry Flynt to buy control of
Free money for registrars, a tax on tradenames (Score:2)
How about .stupid? (Score:2)
.asia? (Score:2)
Re:.asia? (Score:2)
and such. These idiots are just trying to push through "hot new domain names" to sell to chumps during the next "huge internet landgrab."
Now all we need is .terror (Score:2)
.mobi actually u seful.... (Score:2)
All the other ones (.biz?
Re:.mobi actually u seful.... (Score:2)
Imagine a world where every device has its own TLD. Your mobile phone browses only in .mobi, your laptop only in .laptop, you
One Step Further (Score:2)
If Sony wants everything to be
Time to move .gov to .gov.us (Score:2)
While adding domains let's remove this one.
How to sort through them all? (Score:2)
My second thought: eh, how would that help? It's just a mess anyway.
My third: forget trying to figure it all out, and go with a Query By Example style a la X.500. Tell the system everything you know and let it give you a list of "probables".
Right now, if the name isn't instantly obvious, I just look up the entity on AltaVista and wade
TLDs to remove (Score:3, Informative)
If ".biz" is kept, the registration requirements for ".com" should be tightened, so that to get into ".com", you have to have a corporation, a DUNS number, or a business license, with that data in WHOIS. Then the slimeballs can be migrated to ".biz".
.com, .scr, .exe, .vbs (Score:3, Informative)
At the rate TLD's are being added how long before more such problems arise?
How long before users simply click on this stuff, assuming that
Re:flop waiting to happen? (Score:2, Interesting)
And
Re:flop waiting to happen? (Score:2)
Re:Am I the only one (Score:2)
I'm astonished that the governing body for TLD's doesn't get the "top level" versus subdomain parts.
The common argument for new TLD's has alway been the limited namespace of
So what the heck is an international Job? International Cell Phone? Aren't both of these at most regional?
But they've let the cat out of the back long ago, so there is no correcting it and moving to get the U
Re:Am I the only one (Score:2)
Re:still no .xxx ? (Score:2)
Re:Yes, Playboy is porn. (Score:2)
Re:I For One Would Welcome (Score:2)
OrgName: Sprint DSL Network
OrgID: SDSL
Address: 500 N New York Ave
City: Winter Park
StateProv: FL
PostalCode: 32789
Country: US
So it looks like some Sprint DSL customer in New Jersey has it, unfortunately they don't have a website...yet.
Re:How about .porn? (Score:2)
Re:www.sex.xxx (Score:2)