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66.3 Million Domain Names Registered

IO ERROR writes "VeriSign announced that 5.1 million new domains were registered in the third quarter of 2004, and that there are now 66.3 million active domain names, both the highest numbers ever. It also said that the percentage of domains registered to live Web sites has increased and country code top-level domains are becoming more widely accepted."

8 of 179 comments (clear)

  1. Content? by ViolentGreen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I wonder how many have actual content or don't redirect to another site. There are so many names out that that are bought up by corporations that all point to the same ste and so many others that try to capitalize on user stupidity and are just mispellings of popular cites.

    --
    Not everything is analogous to cars. Car analogies rarely work.
    1. Re:Content? by foobsr · · Score: 5, Funny

      mispellings of popular cites

      No.

      Presumably more likely.

      CC.

      --
      TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
  2. Squatting by Nurgled · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I bet most of this year's domains have been registered by the automated scripts which watch for domain expiry and jump in and register the domain from underneath the owner.

    I've seen this happen in no more than a day. It's very annoying, and means people have to move their sites elsewhere and deal with the old site now being at best a page full of adverts and at worst a redirect to some weird porn.

  3. New sites by sczimme · · Score: 5, Funny


    VeriSign announced that 5.1 million new domains were registered in the third quarter of 2004

    The representative then added "Approximately 58% of these are phishing sites."

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    I want to drag this out as long as possible. Bring me my protractor.
  4. Acceptance of country code TLDs by iwan-nl · · Score: 5, Insightful
    country code top-level domains are becoming more widely accepted

    I don't know about the rest of the world, but here in the Netherlands our country-code TLD (.nl) is far more accepted than .com or .net. People have more trust in it because this TLD can only be registered by "legit" companies.

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    I'm trying to improve my English. Please correct me on any spelling/grammar errors in this post.
  5. Country Codes by kjeldor · · Score: 5, Funny

    "and country code top-level domains are becoming more widely accepted"

    I'm sure this acceptance has arisen mainly from everyone's favorite Christmas Island website and it's hypnotizing void.

  6. maybe... by JeremyALogan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Maybe it's because the old domains never die. These god awful search sites and other squatters just buy them all up. I use to own the domain name jeremylogan.com (my name), since I let it die two different domain squatters have bought it up as soon as it was available. I'm really beginning to think we ought to have to justify our domain names in some fashion.

    If you need a little help being convinced just check out http://manpage.com/ and tell me THAT URL couldn't be put to some real use.

  7. Re:Don't believe by ultrasonik · · Score: 5, Interesting

    One note about Go Daddy. I checked the availability of a domain name on Go Daddy. It was available. Then a couple months later I went to register it and it had been bought by a squatter. This has happened to me not once, but twice. Is Go Daddy selling their whois lookups to squatters?