Slashdot Mirror


Dotless Top Level Domains?

nodnarb1978 writes "As reported on Yahoo, a Dutch company called UnifiedRoot wants to offer top level domains without extensions. For instance, just typing slashdot would bring up this site, instead of slashdot.org. UnifiedRoot is careful to differentiate itself from New.net, but it seems their similar business tactics leave plenty of room for comparison. Another bone of contention is the price: UnifiedRoot wants $1000USD up front for a registration, with an additional $240 yearly renewal. With domain abandonments higher than ever, is this a solution looking for a problem? And would anybody really want to place control of entire TLDs in the hands of one private company?"

12 of 370 comments (clear)

  1. No thanks by chipster · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The TLD is an important piece of the identifier, IMHO.

  2. AOL keywords by BushCheney08 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This sounds almost like AOL's keywords, except on an internet-wide basis. We really don't need further AOLification of the internet...Also, several browsers already tack on .com if you just type a single word into the address bar.

    --
    Be a real patriot: Question authority. Think for yourself. Formulate your own conclusions.
  3. Problem by Seumas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm a small fry with a non-commercialized, free site and service that can't afford $1,000 + $240/yr.

    Big company comes in and wants to roll right over me. It's bad enough when someone takes your domain name (but under .net/.org, etc - instead of your own .com). Imagine when someone decides to pony up the cash to completely wipe you out by taking out a rootless domain in your .com domain's name?

    And sure, technically you may be able to fight it in court. But if you can't afford the $1,000 + $240/yr, how the hell are you going to afford an IP / trademark lawyer and a lawsuit?

  4. long domain names by rd4tech · · Score: 4, Insightful

    by their idea, after 10 years, if one wants to register a domain name, the only left ones will be 20 characters minimum. Some division and grouping SHOULD exist.

  5. The dot is useful by venicebeach · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The dot lets you know you're talking about a website. If you see a commercial and it says "go to getfirefox.com" you know you are supposed to type that into your web browser. If people hear instead "go to getfirefox" that will require further explanation...

  6. Re:Really? by JonN · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The large companies would die for this. Imagine you are a small startup company, or you have a website for your own personal interests. Most can't afford the $1000 startup fee, so all it takes for a large company (think M$) to overshadow your domain, is to get the same one, but without the extension.

    --
    do.what.promptcmds
  7. Sounds Dangerous to Me. by hardlined · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What's to stop someone from buying the com domain and using the subdomains to imitate the real domains for example someone buys org and sets up the subdomain slashdot.org

    I don't see how you would differentiate between slashdot.org and slashdot.org, one using a subdomain of an extensionless org TLD.

  8. Agreed!!! by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The TLDs are VERY important, since they help categorise the structure in terms of a tree and give a clear defintion of who is responsible for which subset of the tree.

    Doing what they are doing could potentially screw up internal networks and cause more problems than it solves. Imagine that all your internal hosts have the prefix "internal" and another site pops up called "internal", we would then have the issue of myhost.internal being difficult to resolve. Is it inside the network or outside? I have already have seen something like this happen when internal domains use .local, yet at the same time .local is reserved for use by mDNS.

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
  9. Re:Gotta love this business model by cperciva · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The fact [is] that a DNS server requires next to no bandwidth, cpu power or other facilities

    This depends upon the amount of traffic you're handling. I suspect that the .com name servers spend more than $10/year of bandwidth and CPU time answering requests for google.com.

  10. Reality check by rpetre · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You do, of course, realise that those "no-dot" TLDs will be visible only by the clients of the ISPs that use the alternate DNS root. The ICANN does not include these domains into the root zone and all DNS servers use by default ICANN's root servers ( [A-M].root-servers.net )

    I guess there are still a large number of companies willing to throw money into this, so the theory of stupidity-based business models being a guaranteed success is once again confirmed.

  11. Not all tree are Bonsai Trees by NigelJohnstone · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "and give a clear defintion of who is responsible for which subset of the tree."

    You can have that with an unrestricted root, all you've got there is a Bonsai tree, where every multinational has to contort into millions of little sony.com, sony.fr, sony.net etc. domains. Restricting the number of top level domains simply makes for fewer branches, it doesn't remove the tree.

    For example, a company might register .sex and resell domains on that, a competitor may register .xxx and resell domains on that one, yet another may register .sexy and so on. Why should you restrict what top level domains there are? Why force the tree to be a Bonsai?

    "Imagine that all your internal hosts have the prefix "internal" and another site pops up called "internal", "

    Imagine your internal network is called "travel" and ICANN creates a domain .travel....

  12. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion