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Plans For New TLDs

babycakes writes "Yesterday ICANN unanimously approved a proposal to add a number of new TLDs, to be determined at a later date. Here's the story on InfoWorld and at the BBC."

4 of 275 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Previous plans for more TLD's failed by dj28 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Mods, please check the links of the people you are modding up. In this case, the link in the parent post goes to goatse.cx. Mindless moderation runs so rampant on slashdot.

  2. Re:.porn by nick-less · · Score: 5, Informative


    A .porn domain would be good, if most of the porn was collected under a single TLD it would be easy to block it at schools and so


    blocking via domainnames? I think you'd better block via IP, most of those kids are smart enough to figure this out...
    Anyway the most illegal porn won't be located under http//www.lolita.porn. but under http://fctnts14d017.nbnet.nb.ca/~xydds/ this is why filtering wont work...

  3. Re:.porn by rmohr02 · · Score: 5, Informative

    I believe it's .kids.us

  4. Re:Dot US by Selanit · · Score: 5, Informative
    When will the United States finally have to act like everybody else and use ".us" for sites hosted in the country? I'm sure Microsoft and Netscape would just autocomplete that part, like they do with "http://".

    It's not mandatory to use the two-letter country suffixes for non-US sites. For example, jungle.co.uk (an online retailer of computer goods and so on) is just a re-direct to jungle.com, even though they do business exclusively in the UK.

    Also, the .US domain has recently been opened up to general use. It's available from a number of different registrars, for example here and here and here, to name a few.

    Regarding auto-completing parts of URLs, note that the "http" protocol is universal to web sites. (Well, if you count https, but anybody using that for an entire site will have an unencrypted redirect page if they have the first clue what they're doing.) It is interesting, though, to try different browsers with just random words typed into the location bar. Internet Explorer, for example, will interpret "foobar" as a search term and direct you to a MicroSoft owned search engine where it will search for foobar. Phoenix (and most likely NS7, Beonex, and their common progenitor Mozilla) will assume that you meant http://www.foobar.com/ and send you there.