Posts Tagged ‘new domain names’

153 Million Domain Names registered, 33 Million registered in 2007

Posted in ICANN, News on March 7th, 2008 by Michael – Be the first to comment

Interesting registry statistics published on domainnews.com

VeriSign logo
There were almost 33 million new domain names registered in 2007 according to the fourth quarter 2007 Domain Name Industry Brief published by VeriSign. This brings the total of domain names registered to more than 153 million domain name registrations worldwide across all of the Top Level Domain Names (TLDs). This represents a 27 percent increase over the same quarter last year, and 5 percent growth over the third quarter of 2007.

Of these registrations, the .com and .net adjusted base surpassed 80.4 million domain name registrations at the end of 2007. This represents a 24 percent increase year over year and a four percent increase quarter over quarter. The adjusted base grew by 3.5 million domain names in the fourth quarter and 15.4 million over the entire year. New .com and .net domain name registrations were added at an average of 2.5 million per month in the fourth quarter 2007 for a total of 7.5 million new registrations. read more »

Share

New tld’s ‘.pdf’ or ‘.mp3’ Could Appear

Posted in Country tlds, ICANN, News on February 14th, 2008 by Michael – Be the first to comment

MSNBC reports

NEW YORK – Internet addresses ending in “.pdf” or “.mp3″ could appear under a new proposal, while domain name suffixes consisting entirely of numbers would likely be rejected.

Hints about such do’s and don’ts appeared in a new report issued by the Internet’s key oversight agency, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers. The organization is looking for feedback on security and operational issues that may arise from the introduction of new domain names as early as this year.

ICANN said it considered prohibiting suffixes that match common extensions for file names, such as “.exe” for Windows-based executable programs, “.doc” for documents using Microsoft Corp.’s Word software, “.jpg” for photos in the popular JPEG format, “.pdf” for Adobe Systems Inc.’s ubiquitous Portable Document Format and “.mp3″ for music files.But the organization concluded it would be too difficult to keep track of which extensions are popular enough to prohibit, and allowing them shouldn’t confuse major Web browsers, which already assume that an address refers to a Web page rather than a computer file.

ICANN, however, said it would likely bar all-numeric suffixes, such as “.123.” That’s because domain names are merely easy-to-remember substitutes for the numeric Internet Protocol addresses that computers understand and use behind the scenes. Allowing all-numeric suffixes could result in a Web address that also happens to be an IP address, confusing browsers.

Once ICANN finishes crafting its criteria, it will start taking bids from outside companies and groups for new domain names, so a “.pdf” domain would appear only if an applicant comes forward and wins approval.

ICANN has yet to determine how many new names it will accept to join “.com” and more than 250 others already in place.

 

Interesting industry news. New tlds are always a goldrush at the beginning and a complete failure at the end. Just make you reg them first and sell within a couple months.

Share