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Google The Internet Networking

Google Taking Over New TLDs 185

bobo the hobo writes: In the corner of the internet where people care about DNS, there is a bit of an uproar at Google's application for over a hundred new top-level domains, including .dev, .lol, .app, .blog, .cloud and .search. Their application includes statements such as: "By contrast, our application for the .blog TLD describes a new way of automatically linking new second level domains to blogs on our Blogger platform – this approach eliminates the need for any technical configuration on the part of the user and thus makes the domain name more user friendly." They also mention limiting usage of .dev to Google only: "Second-level domain names within the proposed gTLD are intended for registration and use by Google only, and domain names under the new gTLD will not be available to the general public for purchase, sale, or registration. As such, [Google's shell company] intends to apply for an exemption to the ICANN Registry Operator Code of Conduct as Google is intended to be the sole registrar and registrant."
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Google Taking Over New TLDs

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  • Google is just trying to bully the world for its own interest; not unusual at all. Now will ICANN put its foot down or will every other Fortune 500 company do the same thing and subvert the intention of the creation of new TLDs?

    • by Anonymous Brave Guy ( 457657 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @03:00PM (#49154799)

      Now will ICANN put its foot down

      It had better hope so, because giving entire TLDs to specific big companies could easily be the straw that breaks the camel's back in terms of the rest of the world accepting US-led administration of the general Internet. There's plenty of scepticism already, but organisations like ICANN are tolerated because frankly no-one has much of a better idea or wants to take on the responsibility. However, it is not difficult to think of a better idea than letting big businesses rewrite the established rules in arguably the most important address space in the world today for their own benefit.

    • by Dagger2 ( 1177377 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @03:14PM (#49154893)

      I might be guessing wrong here, but I'm thinking the primary intention of these new TLDs was to earn ICANN shitloads of money. It costs $185,000 just to apply for one, and $25,000/year to keep it.

      Every Fortune 500 company doing the same thing would be a dream come true for them.

      • by rs79 ( 71822 )

        Hey somebody has to pay for the quarterly five star junkets and 3X government scale salaries. A lot of the 1099's are online.

    • by pepty ( 1976012 )
      10 year lease on each TLD. 9 years in each goes to public auction which determines the rate for the next 10 year lease.
  • Suspicions Confirmed (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday February 28, 2015 @01:35PM (#49154343)

    Google must be using .dev internally. This move is only to prevent others from confusing things.

    • by allo ( 1728082 )

      and what prevents them from using dev.internal.google.com as domain? add a search dev.internal.google.com to resolv.conf and you can resolve skynet-testsystem.dev.internal.google.com. And the sole access to google.com is already granted.

  • who cares ? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by itzly ( 3699663 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @01:36PM (#49154349)

    If I need the web site of a church, I wouldn't try name-of-church.church, but I would just search for name-of-church in google. Who cares about the URL ?

    • Re:who cares ? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @01:51PM (#49154445)

      I wouldn't try name-of-church.church, but I would just search for name-of-church in google.

      But how do you know which is the real site? If I am looking for Foobar Inc's website, and I see www.foobar.com, I can be pretty sure that is legitimate. But if I see foobar.info, foobar.dev, foobar.sucks, I don't know if they are legitimate or not. The proliferation of TLD's just pollutes the namespace and sows confusion. They can be used for fraud, or they can be used to extort money from businesses that feel they have to lock down more and more domains. The drawbacks outweigh the benefits, especially as more and more are added.

      • Re:who cares ? (Score:4, Informative)

        by itzly ( 3699663 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @01:56PM (#49154469)

        If I am looking for Foobar Inc's website, and I see www.foobar.com, I can be pretty sure that is legitimate

        Maybe legitimate, but there may be 10 companies in the world called 'foobar', so you still don't know if you've got the right one.

        • by allo ( 1728082 )

          Which is still the same. Have a look at:
          www.volkswagen.com

          www.volkswagen.de
          www.volkswagen.it ...

          they all redirect to volkswagen.com/XX.html
          So, if there is another volkswagen from let's say italy, they are still fucked. And they are fucked anyway because of trademarks.

      • But how do you know which is the real site?

        Its the first result in the Google search response ... at no point have I gotten back a first result for something else when searching for a business, at least not a scam or other illegitimate site.

        In case you haven't noticed, many of the original TLDs have names that are meant to redirect people from the legitimate site to a scam, adding more doesn't make it anything new.

        I would argue however, if they're going to play these TLD bullshit games, just stop and get rid of the concept of a TLD. Let people register whatever they want except for existing TLDs and move on.

      • How is that worse than the existing condition? My company is -----.com, and another is ---.net. They advertise much more. Some of my employees think they work for them.

        Basically all this really does is eliminate the value of the domain name altogether...

      • by sconeu ( 64226 )

        Go ask the White House about the original whitehouse.com

      • by Tom ( 822 )

        If I am looking for Foobar Inc's website, and I see www.foobar.com, I can be pretty sure that is legitimate.

        That's not been true for a decade. Due to overloading (i.e. multiple organisations, same name), the Foobar Inc you are looking for could be at foobar.com - but it could also be at foobar-inc.com or foobarinc.com or foobar-newyork.com or foooobar.com or whatever domain name was still available when they finally went on the Internet.

    • by epyT-R ( 613989 )

      The church might care if google decided to delist them, say for political reasons.

  • Greedy bastards. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by The Rizz ( 1319 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @01:36PM (#49154351)

    I think their application for .dev to be Google-only highlights a major problem with a company like this having control over any TLDs: They intend to use their control to crowd out competitors in a monopolistic fashion. That no non-Google developer can register a .dev is akin to saying that if you don't work for Google you're not really a developer. The only TLD restriction I would be OK with Google having reserved entirely for personal use is .google - and even that I'd be wary of without concrete rule for revoking the exclusive use if a good reason comes up.

    • I guess they are doing it because descriptive TLDs makes search a tiny little bit less necessary.

      On the other hand search - or at least search that might deliver relevant results rather than the spam that Google delivers - would make DNS almost completely unnecessary

      Google isn't likely to give us that kind of search. Ever.

      Google Scholar notwithstanding.

    • by aardvarkjoe ( 156801 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @02:07PM (#49154527)

      That no non-Google developer can register a .dev is akin to saying that if you don't work for Google you're not really a developer.

      This doesn't make much sense. No developers have a .dev URL today, so obviously nobody associates the two that way right now. And if it's restricted to Google developers, that association is never going to be formed in the future either.

      • by The Rizz ( 1319 )

        This doesn't make much sense. No developers have a .dev URL today, so obviously nobody associates the two that way right now. And if it's restricted to Google developers, that association is never going to be formed in the future either.

        This is totally at odds with reality. Strong pushes in branding can and will warp public perception. If Google pushes ".dev = good developers" it will cause a branding in people's minds. At first it's not going to be considered an exclusive requirement that good developers have .dev, but eventually, as the .dev becomes a cognitive shortcut for "good developer" people will start thinking that those without .dev are in some way suspect - after all, if they were that good, why wouldn't they have a .dev?

        This is

        • At first it's not going to be considered an exclusive requirement that good developers have .dev, but eventually, as the .dev becomes a cognitive shortcut for "good developer" people will start thinking that those without .dev are in some way suspect - after all, if they were that good, why wouldn't they have a .dev?

          If Google was capable of doing this, then there would already be a perception that all good developers are Google developers. And that isn't anywhere close to true.

          This isn't just speculation, either - the same thing can be seen in the computer world today (or at least recently) with the "XXX Certification" nonsense, be it A+ / MSDN / whatever. I've seen job hiring requirements that require certifications that are pointless to the job, or that focus more on certifications than actual job experience or ability.

          Nobody but idiot managers think that not having a particular certification means that someone is a bad developer. This isn't a problem where general perception is concerned.

          • by The Rizz ( 1319 )

            If Google was capable of doing this, then there would already be a perception that all good developers are Google developers. And that isn't anywhere close to true.

            You're missing the point of how powerful branding can be.

            Nobody but idiot managers think that not having a particular certification means that someone is a bad developer. This isn't a problem where general perception is concerned.

            Tell that to every good developer who wasn't hired because some shitty developer with an MSDN certification and no experience got hired instead.

            • You're missing the point of how powerful branding can be.

              No, I'm not. But it's not the ".dev" TLD that makes the branding. You're making the assumption that having a ".dev" domain registered to yourself will transform into that branding without any evidence, and against all logic.

              Tell that to every good developer who wasn't hired because some shitty developer with an MSDN certification and no experience got hired instead.

              So what? Idiot hiring managers will do what they do, and there's a huge list of stupid reasons why they might refuse to hire somebody. The availability of .dev domains doesn't make any difference in that respect -- anyone who would make a decision based on something that moronic woul

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        No developers have a publicly accessible .dev URL today.

        FTFY. A lot of developers use dnsmasq to redirect .dev to a webserver on localhost or a testing server. It's pretty much a default in the web development world. My laptop resolves .dev addresses so that project.user.dev works out to the same as http://testingserver/~user/project .

        Google taking the .dev domain opens up weird DNS possibilities.

    • It would be fine if they served merely as registrars allowing any developer to have a site in .dev. But having it as google only is ridiculous, I agree.
    • Anyone know a good petition site we could place a petition on? Maybe try and collect some opposition signatures, get some tech media coverage and -gulp- resist?

      • Anyone know a good petition site we could place a petition on? Maybe try and collect some opposition signatures, get some tech media coverage and -gulp- resist?

        You already missed your chance to give your opinion on generic TLDs [icann.org]. If you were opposed to them, you should've said something 3 years ago. Not that ICANN bothered listening with the prospect of millions of dollars of free revenue weighing down the other side of the scale.

    • I think their application for .dev to be Google-only highlights a major problem with a company like this having control over any TLDs:

      No, it highlights the major problem with turning generic words into a TLD ownable by any single entity. I mean the whole idea of making a generic word a TLD was pretty stupid to begin with. But then selling it off for $100,000 or the highest bidder? That was nothing but pure greed on ICANN's part.

      Given Google's history (e.g. Android is FOSS), I actually consider them

      • by rs79 ( 71822 )

        Sure, using generic names is stupid

        The only thing less stupid is not using them. You'd be stuck with brand names only then, the IP lawyers dream.

        i don't thik .shop or .gallery are bad names because they're generic.

  • Why dev... developers are not exclusive to Google. dev is as generica a domain as you can get, hence TLD hence not google only.
    • It's not only for developers. Last I looked dev also referred to devices.
    • But why does that matter?

      I really can't see any reason why this is any "worse" than a single entity owning, say, http://developer.com/ [developer.com]. Domain names really aren't like real estate -- the namespace is so big that you're always going to be able to find an alternative.

      If there's some group organization that feels strongly that there should be a TLD reserved for developers, then they should go ahead and register one.

  • And no one cares (Score:5, Interesting)

    by ugen ( 93902 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @01:58PM (#49154483)

    I am watching the "new generation" use the internet/web browser. They don't do it the way we (I?) did. They have little concept of "url" or web site address. Any resource they access is entered into the ever-present search box or "magic combo url bar", as series of search terms or a common name. They rely on the (non-standartized but helpful) search subsystem (usually, Google, but not always) to bring them to the right place. Domain names with their formal fixed format are not part of their use pattern, and I don't expect that to change.

    So, let it be .whatever.

    • And half those sort of "new generation" searchers won't know half the time if they are redirected to a phony site.

      • by Kjella ( 173770 )

        And half those sort of "new generation" searchers won't know half the time if they are redirected to a phony site.

        Half the "old generation" didn't know half the time if they are redirected to a phony site by a phishing email. Anyway, that assumes you're going somewhere worth scamming. Email, online bank, ebay sure... but in the last 15+ years I haven't seen a single phishing attempt for my slashdot account info. And stuff that you just read, what's to phish? And that's why the important stuff is moving towards two-factor authentication so just stealing your password isn't enough.

        It's the same generation

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by SeaFox ( 739806 )

        And half those sort of "new generation" searchers won't know half the time if they are redirected to a phony site.

        Or if they are blocked from reaching the site they want by the search provider choosing to delist what they are looking for.

        Who needs an actual government internet filter when you can ask your good friends at the search providers to make the site "disappear" for a growing portion of the population.

    • by epyT-R ( 613989 )

      Well, then that's their limitation, not mine. I am tired of this trend of dumbing things down to the lowest possible. In this case, it puts the search engine in control of who gets to find your site. Also, having sites memorized removes the search step from the process which is a net win for people who actually have brains.

      • by swillden ( 191260 ) <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Saturday February 28, 2015 @02:49PM (#49154727) Journal

        Well, then that's their limitation, not mine. I am tired of this trend of dumbing things down to the lowest possible.

        Damn straight. It's like all these stupid GUI interfaces. I mean, I can see using a graphical interface if you're editing photos or something, but for reading and writing text? It's ridiculous and just makes it so that stupid people can do it without having to understand anything.

        It all started with visual text editors, you know? Line editing was good enough, heck, you could argue that it made things too easy, too. What was really good was when we used toggle switches to enter data and read the output from a sequence of lights. If you can't mentally translate binary to ASCII you don't deserve the power of computation.

        </sarcasm>

    • by pspahn ( 1175617 )

      What does the "new generation" do when entering a host name for some random API request?

      Should we just search for the hostname and hope it's the right one?

    • not sure how new of a generation you mean but I see this every day from 6th - 12th graders.

      Even when being explicitly told what to type and where most will end up at the wrong URL because they don't listen and think that search is the way to enter addresses.

    • I am watching the "new generation" use the internet/web browser. They don't do it the way we (I?) did. They have little concept of "url" or web site address. Any resource they access is entered into the ever-present search box or "magic combo url bar", as series of search terms or a common name. They rely on the (non-standartized but helpful) search subsystem (usually, Google, but not always) to bring them to the right place.

      So in other words, AOL keywords.

    • by rs79 ( 71822 )

      That is very true. You have to remember that when this domain stuff started some of the actors involved still used CRTs and an old Sun and had never used the web. Postels thesis advisor's thesis advisor (Einar Stefferud) and I became good friends and I talked him into buying a laptop so could do something other than say "what is this" when I sent him a URL.

      Stef was thesis advisor to a lot of people: Dave Farber, Brian Reid, etc.He was one of the coolest people ever.

      Search engines were very new and there wa

  • when will the next competitor come to unset googles eventual strangle on the way to access and search websites. This move is BS and should not be allowed except as stated .google or a few other domains but they should be made available to the public.

  • And soon or later, why wouldn't any larger organization apply for their own TLD:s? And how long until the rules are changed to allow organization names or product trademarks as TLD:s? Then everyone may just register <organization>, <product>, <whatever> as their domain. And some lucky gals or guys get "mail" (like mail.com before) and try to sell it to the highest bidder.

    I don't see much advantage to this TLD proliferation.

  • If google is the sole registrar of all .blog domain names, then you never actually 'own' it.

    While I understand the convenience aspect of it, the user cannot transfer it out and is forced to use Google Blogger, and ONLY Blogger. Despite the fact that there are thousands of ways to get a blog online.

    On the topic of .dev: I also don't understand where they are coming from with the .dev TLD. I can see it being valuable to both developers and device makers. Why wouldn't they try to capitalize it instead of hog i

  • by RightwingNutjob ( 1302813 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @03:06PM (#49154847)
    that the new TLDs were a stupid idea and the only reason they were implemented is that the beancounters are in charge instead of the car guys.
    • by msobkow ( 48369 ) on Saturday February 28, 2015 @05:06PM (#49155291) Homepage Journal

      The new TLDs are a cash grab and nothing more. Not only for ICANN, but for every company that manages to buy up a gTLD.

      Basically, the people buying up these gTLDs are hoping to cash in on companies wanting to register .searchterm domains. Which, in my books, is nonsense. I don't trust any of these new domains to be anything but spam traps and phishing expeditions. Given the options in search results, I would always go to the .com, .org, or .net address over a gTLD.

  • relay country TLDs, com net org info to icann, refuse to relay specific stuff like museum, edu, gov, mil (they can use country tlds, if they want) and open the new stuff like .dev .app for everyone, ignoring the monetized use in the icann dns.

  • It was to keep .dev out of the hands of Steve Ballmer!

    The Infamous "Developers" Rant [youtube.com]

  • I got to pile on about this.

    ".dev, .lol, .app, .blog, .cloud and .search." .dev certainly has usefulness well beyond Google. ICANN should refuse this outright. .app? After the fight with Apple, let ICANN deny both of them. .cloud? See .dev for the explanation. .lol? More of the same. .search? Ask Yahoo, Microsoft, and Steve Wolfram about this. .blog? Remarkably tone deaf.

    ICANN should specifically refuse not only Google, but any Google-related applicant.

    Unimaginable. I'll be looking to file comments o

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