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Google The Internet

Google's New .dev Domain Opens To All (engadget.com) 57

On Thursday, Google began officially selling their new .dev domains to anyone, Engadget reports: To claim a .dev, all you need to do is sign up with your registrar of choice (Google, naturally, is an option). As a bonus, Google is offering a free .dev domain to anyone who applied for a ticket to the Google I/O event happening this May.

The domains will be secure by default, as they all require HTTPS, and Google has already moved many of its own sites (including web.dev, opensource.dev and flutter.dev) to the domain.

"The internet has come a long way from the days of .com, .org and .net," writes Engadget. "Now, you can get domains ending in anything from .cool to .ninja."

UPDATE (3/3/2019): Apparently the domain emacs.dev now points to the web site for Vim.
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Google's New .dev Domain Opens To All

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  • by dabadab ( 126782 ) on Saturday March 02, 2019 @06:47PM (#58205564)

    The domains will be secure by default, as they all require HTTPS,

    What does that even actually mean?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    People got .com - you entered the name and added .com. Now people are forgetting what a URL even is, thanks in part to google who has confused them with the difference between a search on google and entering in an address. By adding more .TLDs google further aids this confusion. It also allows confusion between legitimate and illegitimate sites for various brands and products and generates a way of forcing companies to register more and more different .TLDs to protect their trademarks and web presence. Goog

    • Well, Google also loves the new TLDs because it makes the whole URL system less understandable to most people. I mean, they already are training you not to understand the difference between a search query (forwarded to them) and a URL in the address bar.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    So much for my plans.
  • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Saturday March 02, 2019 @07:14PM (#58205656)

    Google's New .dev Domain Opens To All

    And their new ".notadev" domain opens to everyone else. Paradox imminent.

    • by Stan42 ( 5773912 )
      Agree to this ! Unless they expand...
  • Amazing (Score:4, Funny)

    by Time_Ngler ( 564671 ) on Saturday March 02, 2019 @09:06PM (#58206022)

    "The internet has come a long way from the days of .com, .org and .net," writes Engadget. "Now, you can get domains ending in anything from .cool to .ninja."

    What progress!

  • How can a domain "require ssl"?

  • by null etc. ( 524767 ) on Saturday March 02, 2019 @11:30PM (#58206442)

    These new domain TLDs are apparently enforcing the law of supply and demand, by charging more for "coveted" and popular domains.

    For example, "so.dev" is a 2-letter domain, which Google prices at $720/yr. "sot.dev" is a 3-letter domain, but what the hell is a "sot", so that only cost $98/yr. Meanwhile, "sos.dev" costs $360/yr, because if you really need help, it should cost more. "pants.dev" is $98/yr, but if you want to save some money, you can just register "pant.dev", which is $56/yr.

    Even though this "nickel and dime" pricing is just the latest extension to our capitalist overlords trying to suck us dry for every cent we have, I hate the idea.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I think it's 50/50 getting money but also, the reason they charge a premium for shorter domains is otherwise it'd be fairly cheap to bot-register the entire domain space say, 12 characters and under, and then flip them all via auction

      • by Anonymous Coward
        More likely they use analysis of similarly named domains on other TLDs. Some suckers even used Google analytics on their .com to make it easier for Google to squeeze out every last cent. Think high speed trading meets real estate tycoon.
    • by CRC'99 ( 96526 )

      Agreed. I threw in my online alias into it, $260/yr for the first year. Tried with another registrar, $19.95/yr....

      Seems like Google is playing the game.

  • dev an advanced and new ad blocker.
  • Check them out:

    www.vim.dev [vim.dev]
    www.emacs.dev [emacs.dev]

    I did not found this, read it somewhere :)

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