ICANN Considers Single Letter Domains 314
* * 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."
So who gets them? Sesame street? (Score:5, Funny)
Single "Letter" Domains (Score:3, Funny)
Now Taco is mocking us (Score:5, Funny)
LMAO (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:LMAO (Score:5, Funny)
Only 26 (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Only 26 (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Only 26 (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Only 26 (Score:5, Informative)
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....
Wrong language (Score:2)
Damn ... I knew I should have picked up Chinese as my second language....
Re:Wrong language (Score:2)
Only the 26 letters of the English alphabet are usable in domain names AFAIK. Letters from foreign alphabets (and ideographs from languages that use those, such as Chinese) are invalid characters.
Re:Only 26 (Score:2)
Domains can't begin with numbers (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Domains can't begin with numbers (Score:2)
How many domain names start with 8?
Re:Only 26 (Score:2)
got 5.com? get 100.5 FM KY bidding against 100.5 fm NY
Re:Only 26 (Score:2)
3. Profit!!!
It all makes sense now.
Re:Only 26 (Score:2)
Re:Only 26 (Score:2)
Re:Only 26 (Score:5, Insightful)
This will not do a thing for the net as a whole and will only make more trouble for ICANN.
Re:Only 26 (Score:2)
I think they've already shown they're not overly concerned about such charges.
slashdot.o ? (Score:5, Funny)
This could
tinyurl? (Score:4, Funny)
3...2...1... (Score:2)
I just don't see why single letter domain names ar (Score:5, Insightful)
Nor do I see why they had to get held back (mostly -- just check the list) until now.
Does anybody really want the letter 'j'? What does that mean? Is it really worth big bucks?
I would guess that at some point you won't have domains, but some sort of searching facility -- e.g. a bunch of tags. At that point, the name won't really matter, and you probably won't want to remember most of them.
E.g. your microwave will have the IP: 123.223.3.123.43....
But you'll look it up on your keychain device, or do a search for "Me" "microwave" to get the magic number.
And your living rooms light switches address will be
and so on -- everything will have an IP, but you won't be able to name all that stuff anyway.
Re:I just don't see why single letter domain names (Score:2)
These bozo's can be made ignorable overnight with the establishment of a second DNS system. it blows my mind that it has not happened already. and no it would not cause instand caos as some would like you to believe.
ICANN dns and Dave's DNS duplicates would simply resolve to two addresses. have the web browser pop up both and let the user choose.
Having a single DNS system is not a law.
Re:I just don't see why single letter domain names (Score:3, Interesting)
About says it all....
Re:I just don't see why single letter domain names (Score:3, Insightful)
managing the top level of a unique nameing system is a natural monopoly.
Re:I just don't see why single letter domain names (Score:2)
Instead of using a separate service, and using several words, you can have four characters. Why would you want more? Heck... even typing in the IP is a lot faster than doing that search for "me microwave" you mentioned.
Re:I just don't see why single letter domain names (Score:2)
tinyurl.com is 11 characters.
u.cc is four.
In places like, oh, SLASHDOT SIGS, that'd help a lot.
What about international characters? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What about international characters? (Score:3, Insightful)
That said, I'm really not too familiar with this subject at all (I just looked up the RFC) so please someone correct me if I'm wrong...
It's amazing... (Score:5, Funny)
Then suddenly it seems like he's popping up left and right. It's like something out of a low-grade horror movie. To make matters worse, someone nearby keeps blasting Beatles tunes from their cubicle - not even the good ones. I half expect an undead George Harrison to start clawing at my bedroom window tonight.
Re:It's amazing... (Score:4, Funny)
www.w.us (Score:2, Funny)
from the people that brought you ".museum" (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:from the people that brought you ".museum" (Score:2)
Re:from the people that brought you ".museum" (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:from the people that brought you ".museum" (Score:2)
From past Slashdot discussions, I would say they're getting more respect than the U.N., at least in the U.S.A.
Lame gTLDs were a Good Thing! .Museum's better (Score:3, Interesting)
So wrong ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Now, I will grant that with the advent of search engines, this is far less of an issue than it was 20 years ago.
Still, the domain name conventions are NOT about corporations "extending their branding." It's about organizing the ip space into human-readable and human-understandable segments. Single letter domain names do nothing to further that purpose.
It's a bad idea not because of any technical limitations but merely because it is bowing to corporate pressures in the governance of the last arena in the world where people have more power than the companies.
But then again they're so few (Score:2)
If you multiply that by the number of country codes (248) you still get only 133920 unique addresses.
Regardless their misguided motivation, it will be funny to see Microsoft, McDonald's and Motorol
In a world where... (Score:2)
I'm sure the corporations see this as nothing more than the Internet "finally catching up" to the real world.
And, I agree, that's disturbing as hell...
BURN ALL TLD's (Score:5, Interesting)
Personally, I think we don't need TLD's anymore. The idea that an independent system should be vetting the
Ultimately, I think that if I could alter the domain name system, I'd burn all TLD's. Most groups register the
However, I can see the logic of reserving 2 letter codes for countries. After all, they have the guns and decide the laws. I don't know what 1 letter domains could be used for, but I'd prefer that they not be allocated yet either (for future use, perhaps). Selling 26*n (where n == number of TLDs at any moment) domain names isn't really worth the headache of changing the rules, and they could come in handy later.
Of course, then the job of the registrar becomes much more administrative. So odds of ICANN actually doing this are slim --> none.
Re:BURN ALL TLD's (Score:4, Insightful)
Because it would be confusing if you wanted to tell someone to go to that site, e.g.
You: "Go to aitch tee tee pee colon slash slash cocacola"
Them: "Sorry, I fell asleep halfway through that. Hmm?"
as opposed to current usage,
You: "Go to cocacola dot com"
It's the "dot com" bit that tells everyone that you are talking about a website, because no-one I know uses the redundant "aitch tee tee pee colon slash slash" bit in normal chat. Of course you could say "visit our website, it's cocacola" but you'd have to do that everytime you refer to the cocacola website rather than the soft drink. Imagine business meetings in the soft drink industry.
Q: "Have you seen cocacola recently?"
A: "What, the website or the company?"
Something needs to distinguish the brand from the domain, because until now, the context has been quite clear whether you are referring to a name, a brand, a site, or the product. Drop the "dot com" and it starts to get confusing.
Re:So wrong ... (Score:3, Insightful)
All due respect to our founding coders, but the notion that we could classify all human endeavor according to a taxomonmy based on the categories educational, government, military, commercial, network, organization, or country was naive and arroga
A new record? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:A new record? (Score:2)
this one, "Microsoft Receives Open Source VIP Blessing" and "Introverts Have More Brain Activity?"
Re:A new record? (Score:2)
Re:A new record? (Score:4, Insightful)
I think you mean, assuming Slashdot isn't already on his payroll.
Re:A new record? (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, its 3 in 24 hours. Take a looke here: http://slashdot.org/~*%20*%20Beatles-Beatles [slashdot.org]
Its also nuts that this guy has already gotten his karma bumped up. I don't know how much accepted stories raises your karma, but this guy is brand new and has only posted a handful of comments.
Plus the George Harrison site that he is pumping really looks like it sucks. I've heard that he is a search engine optimizer or something. Don't really know what is going on here.
For those that didn't bother to read the article.. (Score:4, Informative)
Yes, I realize there are a few out there, www.X.org comes to mind. Most of the single letter domains are registered to:
[whois.iana.org]
IANA Whois Service
Domain: c.com
Name: IANA_RESERVED
The article also states that IANA started reserving these in 1993, but the whois record for x.org shows it was created in 1997.
Finally, we can get a .m TLD (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't think you're going to get any of these (Score:5, Interesting)
How have they beaten you to the punch? For example, Yahoo has already trademarked "Y.COM". Even if you get www.y.com, they simply take it away for you for free as the "trademark owner," and brand you as a criminal cyber-squatter in the process.
Oh, and btw, have a nice day!
Re:Don't think you're going to get any of these (Score:2)
Re:Don't think you're going to get any of these (Score:2)
Not it's not, and I'd like to think you'd know better. Applying for a trademark is not applying for a web domain name. It's more like pre-emptive Foo.
Is 'B' distinctive? Is dot (TM)? (Score:2)
Besides, if these clowns say single characters ARE appropriate, and then some trademark office somewhere lest some company trademark the dot (as in "The Dot in Dot Com," anyone?) we'd all be POOCHED.
Next in the news - Single Digit (Score:5, Funny)
First dupe post fromt he future -
Of course, 1 is going to go for big bucks - "We're #1".7 also - "Lucky us".
Avis will buy #2 - "We're #2 - we try harder"
3 will be bought out as a business portal - "3's company"
4 will be some scam - "trust us - we work 4 u" - or some golf site - "fore!"
9 will be sold to some kraut anti-drug campaign - "just say 9/nein"
8 will go to weight-watchers or slimfast - "8 too much?"
5 will go to whoever looses the bid for 1 - they''ll then say "5 - we're the quintiscential site" or some other loser shit
6 will go to an online redneck pharmacy - "when you'se feeling six as a dawg, order your meds from 6.com"
0, of course, will be the big one. The BIGGEST sex portal - "come to 0.com - because you can't get any lower than us"
Remember - watch for it next year
tt
why? (Score:3, Funny)
Beatles (Score:3, Interesting)
Thank god! (Score:3, Funny)
New Dating Sites (Score:2)
One option... (Score:2)
But yeah. That's all I could come up with.
Ah Memories (Score:2)
what is next, random characters of random length?
How to Advertise on Slashdot (Score:5, Informative)
TWW
I think the whole point of this... (Score:2)
Get them while they last (Score:2)
Here is another idea (Score:3, Interesting)
(1) Reverse the DNS order (e.g. http://aol.www/ [aol.www])
(2) Get rid of TLDs, make everything up for grabs, and force at least two domain combinations
this makes stuff like
http://microsoft.msdn/ [microsoft.msdn]
http://gnu.linux/ [gnu.linux]
http://debian.sarge/ [debian.sarge]
http://gentoo.linux/ [gentoo.linux]
possible. Imagine the possibilities!
x.org (Score:2)
Re:But they already exist (Score:2)
Re:But they already exist (Score:2)
I'm not sure that the latter distinction gets what is, or will be, new -- whatever that is. From the article:
Re:But they already exist (Score:2)
"Six single-letter names already claimed at the time _ "q.com," "x.com, "z.com," "i.net," "q.net," and "x.org" _ were allowed to keep their names for the time being."
Re:But they already exist (Score:2)
Re:But they already exist (Score:5, Informative)
Six single-letter names already claimed at the time _ "q.com," "x.com, "z.com," "i.net," "q.net," and "x.org" _ were allowed to keep their names for the time being.
Re:But they already exist (Score:2)
So when do they do the opposite? Make a "general" TLD? Just require that the "general" domains be 4 or more chars. Then send any request involving a TLD with more than 3 chars to the new "general" TLD's domains. Ditch the whole "com/net/org" argument by just letting them name their domain whatever, as long as it's over 3 characters.
Answered in the article (Score:2)
Re:But they already exist (Score:4, Funny)
That would open up *thousands* of new possiblilies for domain names...
Re:But they already exist (Score:3, Funny)
Re:x.org (Score:2, Informative)
Six single-letter names already claimed at the time _ "q.com," "x.com, "z.com," "i.net," "q.net," and "x.org" _ were allowed to keep their names for the time being.
Re:Heh... **Beatles!!! (Score:3, Informative)
Am I the only person who has noticed the numerous stories that get posted by *--Beatles-Beatles? Am I also the only person who has noticed that the link used in is name is a constantly changing URL (depending on the story) with pointers to various scammy sites? Is it not obvious what he's doing? He's using the awesome PageRank of slashdot do promote his sites based on sear
Re:Heh... **Beatles!!! (Score:2)
Seconded
(or better yet, only link the submitter's name to his/her user page).
Won't work, it's trivial to solve that daily or so.
Re:Heh... **Beatles!!! (Score:2)
Whatever his motivations this guy has supplied most of the interesting stories recently. If he's using it to gain a little pagerank increase, does it really matter that much?
Re:Heh... **Beatles!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean, this isn't like Roland who linked to the story on his ad supported blog rather than directly to the article. At least this guy has the common curtesy link directly.
And people have said that he changes his homepage a lot, I've just seen the George Harrison one, can someone please post some evidence to the contrary?
I mean, I love a good old-fashioned pitchfork and torch rally on Slashdot as good as the next guy, but I'm wondering if this guy is the right target for it.
Re:Heh... **Beatles!!! (Score:2)
"Please mod parent down...he asserts that the linked website in question is devoid of original content and full of adverts when in fact IT IS NOT!
I know many of you will not want to verify to increase hi
Re:Heh... **Beatles!!! (Score:2)
Re:Heh... **Beatles!!! (Score:2)
Domain names are an essential requirement (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Domain names are an essential requirement (Score:2)
Of course, AOL keywords were a private form of DNS, but they worked well. Sure, corporations with money could own the most powerful keywords, but that is true of domain names as well.
I think, as time goes on, we will see more need for SEO over DNS. Right now I know of at least 20% of my customer base that spends 100 times more on SEO than they ever will on getting a good domain name. If that isn't proof of the limi
Re:Domain name uselessness (Score:3, Insightful)
Search engines are better than nothing, but by and large they are not great.
This defeats the entire point of hypertext, and you are taking the power away from the people and placing it squarely in the hands of the corporations (like Yahoo and Google).
I admit DNS is not that great, bu
Re:Domain name uselessness (Score:2)
I'm guessing he just uses that machine for Slashdot, and doesn't ever RTFA.
Is He Serious? (Score:4, Insightful)
You're suggesting we all dump DNS and just use search engines for everything. Let me ask you this. When everyone has done this, How the hell will search engines work?!
Consider Google pagerank. It searches you page, finds links to other pages.... but wait! These links are now not direct links. They are search engine terms which may or may not return the desired site, and by clicking on the link, you change its value on the search engines rank.
You'd turn the whole internet in some kind of quantum mechanical system where you're never quite sure where a link points to until you click on it, and once you've done so you've changed the state of the link. I'm sure we'll all get around just fine.
Not to mention the increased bandwidth and overhead. The net would quickly become primarily a system of passing around search engine queries rather than actual end user data.
Your idea sucks. Turn back on your DNS and svae the world some extra bandwidth.
Re:Domain name uselessness (Score:2)
Re:Domain name uselessness (Score:2)
Also, your DNS ranting is just bizarre. It works fine for what it does. It's the proliferation of retarded TLDs like
Re:Domain name uselessness (Score:2)
I accept that we need something in place of direct IP addresses, but I also don't want to have to listen to ICANN or whoever is in charge of the system. It isn't really necessary, in my opinion. The majority of sites that I access are not dynamic IPs, and in the event of IPv6 actually going live for 100% of the network, dynamic IPs will be useless.
Wh
Re:Domain name uselessness (Score:2)
There have been a few distributed DNS solutions that have come up over the years, and many of them have merit but aren't fully ready for prime time. For now, DNS isn't a huge problem, but I do see it getting into the twilight years of its life.
As time goes on, though, it will show its age. I don't have the replacement solution, and if I did it would either be ahead of its time or I'd be a billionaire. I will, however, keep loo
Re:Please don't bother (Score:2)
FWIW, it's not just ScuttleMonkey - note that this is CmdrTaco that did this.
Obviously the news filters do (Score:2)
Also, I care enough so that i'm posting this knowing that i'll get modded OT.
Re:these are simple, just like unix! (Score:3, Funny)
It was hilarious when a coworker tried to do 'sudo cd some_directory_with_strong_permissions', and was asking me why it wasn't working. What's scarier, is that she had sudo access. What's even more scary, is that she eventually took my job after I left.
Re:these are simple, just like unix! (Score:2, Troll)
For me, a command is something which I can type in a shell. It may execute a shell builtin, a shell function, an alias, or an executable found in the path, but in any case it's a command.
See e.g. the bash man page:
Re:these are simple, just like unix! (Score:3, Informative)
I'm always right and I never lie!
Note that even if sudo successfully executed the cd command (say, by executing it in a root subshell), the intended effect will not happen (because the directory change would only happen in the subshell - which immediatly terminates afterwards -, and the original shell's current directory will not be affected).
Yup. That is why I thought it was funny. 'cd' has to either be a builtin for a shell or something you do i
Re:these are simple, just like unix! (Score:3, Funny)