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Google The Internet

Google Brings Its '.new' Domains To the Rest of the Web (techcrunch.com) 39

A year ago, Google rolled out ".new" links that worked like shortcuts to instantly create new Google documents. For example, you could type "doc.new" (without the quotes) to create a new Google Doc or "sheet.new" to create a new spreadsheet. Today, Google announced it's bringing the .new shortcuts to the rest of the web. From a report: Now, any company or organization can register their own .new domain to generate a .new shortcut that works with their own web app. Several have already done so, including Microsoft, which now has "word.new" to start a new word document, or Spotify, which has "playlist.new" to start adding songs to a new playlist on its streaming app. The domains are designed to get users straight to the action. That is, instead of having to visit a service, sign in, then find the right menu or function, they could just start creating. However, some of today's new domains aren't quite as seamless as Google's own.
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Google Brings Its '.new' Domains To the Rest of the Web

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 29, 2019 @03:01PM (#59359150)
    I want to register this one!
    • by Anonymous Coward
      "Sorry Dave, I can't do that..."
  • by dicobalt ( 1536225 ) on Tuesday October 29, 2019 @03:06PM (#59359184)
    Sounds like a good way to make a big security hole.
  • by mnemotronic ( 586021 ) <mnemotronic@noSpaM.gmail.com> on Tuesday October 29, 2019 @03:08PM (#59359194) Homepage Journal
    To become "for sale to highest bidder".
    • And Chrome.new and Chrome.exe.new and ntoskrnl.exe.new and vmlinux.new!

      And shell.new, so you can have a proper OS where crap like this is not supported wherever you are. escape-hatch.new and help-everyone-is-literally-insane.new will redirect to it.

  • keywords.old (Score:5, Insightful)

    by xack ( 5304745 ) on Tuesday October 29, 2019 @03:14PM (#59359212)
    Google keeps messing with the url bar turning it into a keyword machine like aol used to be.
    • What do you mean messing with the url bar? Open a command line and ping doc.new and you'll find it's an actual DNS. All they've done is setup some redirects to some mini web apps that do some sort of API call to different web services.
      • Something OP definitely already implied.

        • How did he imply that? He specifically said they are messing with the url bar. They did nothing with the URL bar. This feature works in firefox and other browsers. What he's saying is basically equivalent to saying anybody registers a misspelling of the real DNS and redirects it to the real DNS is "messing with the url bar". Sites like shorturl are messing with the url. Heck, anyone who setups shortcut/bookmark URLs on their website to prevent from having to re-navigate through filled out forms is "messing
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • ... its attempt to take over the Internet....
  • How about no (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sectokia ( 3999401 ) on Tuesday October 29, 2019 @03:25PM (#59359246)
    Have any major browsers just said no to this BS and kept only to the original tlds? End user education and ability to read urls is already garbage. We already have to teach people how to identify the host name from between the slashes and then read the levels backwards to try and teach that login.foobar.com is real while foobar.secureloginsafe.com is fake. Not you throw all these stupid names into the mix....
    • by Anonymous Coward
      Hush. You're attempting to interfere with "innovation".
    • by geek ( 5680 )

      I've never liked that TLD's even existed. I honestly do not see the point other than it being a money making scheme.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Have any major browsers just said no to this BS and kept only to the original tlds?

      No, because until very recently, it was not a browser concern. The browser merely passed the hostname to the OS and the OS did the name resolution. It would be up to the OS resolver to block the new TLDs

    • Have any major browsers just said no to this BS and kept only to the original tlds?

      1) DNS is responsible for resolving gTLDs, not your browser, so why would we want browsers refusing to browse to valid—if silly—domains?

      2) Define "original tlds". Do you mean the original gTLDs [ietf.org] (i.e. only .gov, .edu, .com, .mil, and .org), without newer gTLDs like .info, .biz, .mail, or other such nonsense? What about ccTLDs? The original ones were .us, .uk, and .il for the US, UK, and Israel. Every other nation was added later.

      3) If your goal is to eliminate silly domain name usage, what about

      • I know itâ(TM)s not a browsers job, but all of these new levels are mainly targeting end users, trying to help then remember names. The thing is end: users are dumb and canâ(TM)t even read URLs to figure out what host they are connecting too, let alone once you start adding all these obscure names.
    • It's been a long time since I've used IE/Edge. I recently helped someone with a hardware problem on their computer, and fired up Edge. When it displayed the Homepage, I noticed that the URL/Search bar was blank. I had no idea Edge doesn't even display the URL at all when you're looking at the startup or home pages. Will typing "new" simply take me to a Bing search for "new?"

      Bonus: while typing this reply, Firefox popped up an update notification, and interpreted my typing as permission to update (Firefo

  • where the articles are not advertisements, the editing process works and all the comments will be insightful and respectful.

  • I'm officially old (Score:5, Insightful)

    by stinerman ( 812158 ) on Tuesday October 29, 2019 @04:00PM (#59359382)

    Who asked for this?

    The drive to make everything a web app is going to end up biting us in the rear and hard.

    • Who asked for this?

      Exactly. Though, to be fair, this is also the first thing I say to myself whenever I read the new "features" list for every Chrome and Firefox release ...

    • The drive to make everything a web app is going to end up biting us in the rear and hard.

      Who is us? Certainly not the millions of people around the world who never wanted to install an office suite on their computer for the once in a blue moon they have to open a word document.

  • by IWantMoreSpamPlease ( 571972 ) on Tuesday October 29, 2019 @04:44PM (#59359548) Homepage Journal

    blowjob.new

    I think this is something we can all agree on!

  • In the browser (a VM) it will run a VM with Linux, to run Firefox (another VM), to launch Word, so you can write a document like the WhatWG neonuthouse intended!

    Really, every time you think that crowd cannot come up with something more insane, they blow your mind.

  • For example, you could type "doc.new" (without the quotes) to create a new Google Doc or "sheet.new" to create a new spreadsheet.

    ... 'cause I'm starting of with: "new.new", then "old.new" ...

  • Blocked in the MTA for inbound and outbound connections.
    Blocked in DNS all new TLD lookups return NXDOMAIN

    Problem solved.

    • by Megane ( 129182 )

      Yep, that's the first thing I thought. Yet another TLD to block wholesale from my incoming SMTP. [clickety-clickety] new REJECT :wq Done.

      I will say one thing about these stupid new TLDs, I get so much less less spam since spammers these days don't know how to forge headers, and simply register a domain from these TLDs that no sane person would use for ordinary e-mail. Annoyingly, I did have to add three whitelist exceptions, one for .us and two for .info .

  • I'm very much opposed to the current trend in "hidden" cloud computing where documents may be on your compute, the cloud or both. Having what looks sort of like an internet address typed into the address bar actually accessing a local(?) program to create a local (?) document seems bad for several reasons.

    Security: I want to know what is on my local machine and what is being sent outside. I don't want things that look like internet addresses running software on my machine unless is well sandboxed. If an

  • As I said some weeks ago, complete useless waste of money: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
  • Or should I wait for .newer and .newest?
  • Other ideas:
    who-k.new
    york.new

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