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Bug The Internet IT

Dot-Word TLDs Further Delayed 86

benfrog writes "The security bug that has been stalling the 'dot-word TLD land grab' might be fixed, but ICANN says it needs another week 'to sift through its mountains of TAS logs, in order to figure out which applicants' data was visible to which other applicants.' Needless to say, some are less than thrilled about the further delay."
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Dot-Word TLDs Further Delayed

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  • Am I Bovvered? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 23, 2012 @10:11PM (#39778419)
    Was anyone who didn't want to buy/sell them keen on the idea anyway?
  • by bmo ( 77928 ) on Monday April 23, 2012 @10:26PM (#39778493)

    ...at ICANT's continuing strategy to turn this TLD thing into a blackmail scheme for companies, orgs, schools, etc. "Here, buy another domain because someone might squat on it!"

    It's not my job to deal with that directly, but as a geek it rubs me the wrong way. It's deliberately injecting chaos into an already chaotic system. It's not like TLDs outside of .net, .org, .com, .edu, and cc codes matter. When is the last time you visited a company that used .biz that wasn't a fly-by-night spammer? Yeah, thought so.

    --
    BMO

  • Evolution (Score:5, Insightful)

    by lucm ( 889690 ) on Monday April 23, 2012 @10:41PM (#39778573)

    There was a time when having a good domain name was required to be found on Internet. In those days, people paid insane amount of money to buy domains.

    Then Google came, and changed everything. The domain name was not that important anymore, not as much as getting a good ranking, for which content was key. So people paid good money to generate content (aka blogs) and enlisted the help of (so-called) SEO specialist, some of which went to far (ask JcPenney).

    Then Facebook came, and changed things even more. No more websites, no more blogs - "just visit our Facebook page and Like us, we'll give you a voucher for a free bottle of shampoo".

    I may be silly but I say: fix DNS and bring back the domains. I don't like Liking and I hate blogs.

  • by multicoregeneral ( 2618207 ) on Monday April 23, 2012 @11:05PM (#39778669) Homepage
    So I decided not to pay attention to it for a few years after .info. Next thing I know there's .name, .asia, .cat, .jobs, .tel, .museum (can anyone even spell that?), .travel, and .xxx. And while all of this is going on, the only tld that anyone even knows exists is the .com. There hasn't been a land grab for any of them. But I can't help getting the feeling that our friends at Icann keep expecting us to get Pokemon fever with these things. Maybe if a new tld was something special again? Maybe if the public was a little better educated on what a tld is, and why we need them? Why do we still need tld's anyway? Ah well. That's my two cents.
  • by billcopc ( 196330 ) <vrillco@yahoo.com> on Monday April 23, 2012 @11:58PM (#39778901) Homepage

    We're talking about large corporate entities who think putting down $185k for the right to apply for a vanity domain is money well spent

    In other words, crooks!

    Call me old-school, call me a goddamned luddite, but I see nothing wrong with the current set of TLDs. What I do see wrong with the system is the continued encouragement of domain squatting by entities who add zero value to the internet. We don't need more domains, we need the current ones to be taken away from some of these parasitic organisations who thrive on "tasting", search spam, and pure flipping. There are domains that have been held ransom for 15+ years now, which have never been associated with a proper site other than "click here to buy this domain".

    My solution is quite simple: unless you own a registered trademark, or use your real name or surname, you have to use it or lose it! That takes care of a ALL existing domain squatters who hang on to tens of thousands of domains each, because it only takes one four-figure sale a month to subsidize their entire rotten portfolio. The way ICANN has handled things is an absolute travesty and a gross distortion of DNS' original purpose: to help people find stuff!

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