ICANN Considers Single Letter Domains
* * Beatles-Beatles writes "...as the Internet's key oversight agency considers lifting restrictions on the simplest of names. In response to requests by companies seeking to extend their brands, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers will chart a course for single-letter Web addresses as early as this weekend, when the ICANN board meets in Vancouver, British Columbia. Those names could start to appear next year."
TWW
"Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
Actually it's less than you might think....
.com .edu .gov .int .mil .net and .org
.com, .net and .org are 'open' for registration so that gives you 3 x 26 = 78
.biz .info .name .pro .aero .coop and .museum
.coop and .museum) so the policies regarding registration are at the discretion of the sponsor. That leaves 4 more TLDs under the control of ICANN as far as policies go. We're up to 7 x 26 = 182
.ac .ad .ae .af .ag. .ai .al .an ......... .za .zm .zw
gTLDs -
Of those, only the
Then you've got the new TLDs;
Of those 3 are sponsored (.aero
Then there are the ccTLDs;
But the ccTLDs are under the control of a delegated agent in the country involved and the policies are once again at the discretion of the delegated agent. You've just lost the 240 x 26 which would have really bulked out those numbers.
Oh, and then you have to take away the 6 existing one letter domain names which leaves us with a grand total of new 'approved by ICANN' one letter domains of;
(7 x 26) - 6 = 176
So it's not that many....