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Brazil and Peru Dispute .Amazon TLD

judgecorp writes "Amazon.com could lose the .amazon domain, as Brazil and Peru have disputed the retailer's application to ICANN, backed by other South American governments, who want to protect use of that domain for 'purposes of public interest related to the protection, promotion, and awareness raising on issues related to the Amazon biome.'"

3 of 163 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Good by Samantha+Wright · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The silliest part about custom TLDs is that because they're so obscure, you have to put "http://" in front of them for people to recognize them in the wild. Replacing "amazon.com" with "http://amazon" is a net increase in number of characters, defeating any benefits that may have come by avoiding the TLD. I guess if you're starting with ".org.uk" or something similar it's neutral, but a lot of countries abbreviate the category part to two characters (.or.jp, .co.uk, etc), making the addition of "http://" still worse.

    Unless it's 2002 again and we're suddenly writing out "www." for everything?

    --
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  2. This is exactly what was predicted by MobyDisk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When ICANN proposed this new TLD concept, this is exactly what people were saying would happen. The entire point of the original domain name system was that it was hierarchical, so that terms like "amazon," which were ambiguous, were not in contention. It is clear that amazon.com is a commercial company while amazon.pe is the river in Peru. If you give one trademark holder the entire hierarchy, the system falls apart.

    At the risk of being trollish by linking to my own Slashdot comment:
    http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2782577&cid=39661791

  3. Read the truth about ICANN and the DNS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting