I get that some instances use the domain + TLD to make a word, like lemm.ee or to an extent, sh.itjust.works. But I’ve seen so many TLDs I had no idea existed, like .world, .zone, .social, and yes .works as well.
Is there any real reason for that? Trying to look cool or kinda underground-y? Cheaper and more varied domain options? Something actually kinda functional?
Interestingly, I started on vlemmy.net because I was a scared Reddit refugee and the .net TLD gave me comfort. Then it vanished a few days later without a trace. So here I am on lemmy.world
Because it’s no longer 1996 and there are domains beyond ccTLDs and com/net/org?
It’s not 1996 anymore?!! Why didn’t somebody tell me? My license is probably expired.
One day it was just 1997. Damnedest thing, there was no vote or anything. Frankly I think it was a bad move.
Yep, straight from Macarena to Tubthumping and nobody even noticed.
I hate that my brain played little riffs of both of those songs for me just by seeing their titles.
That was an upgrade, imo
In the beginning the Universe was created. This has made a lot of people very angry and been widely regarded as a bad move.
Who is this “God” Person Anyway?
Those who know seem unimpressed
We should never have left the oceans.
Don’t say that, @FlyingSquid. You’re beautiful, and when us primates are doing ruining ourselves, you will inherit the earth and fly over mountains and forests as well.
Bow to us, monkey boys!
Shit, gotta get my car inspected too
No way dude it’s gonna be 1996 forever… Forever… Forever…
You can buy .zip if you want to now… that still doesn’t sit right with me
I’m still waiting for .rar so I can buy unregistered.rar, which is the way it’s meant to be.
I’m waiting for .7z because it doesn’t nag me to register it.
Being the registered owner of unregistered.rar really doesn’t seem like the way it’s meant to be
From what I’ve heard, .zip is basically only used for malware
Similarly, I’ve never seen a .xyz that wasn’t used for altchans or sketchy porn sites
sopuli.xyz is a sizeable Lemmy instance
Hurts a little that 4k users is “sizeable”, but I guess we have to start somewhere.
For me, that was .dance and .moe.
And then there’s .ninja which so far has been strictly small web animations.
I really wish Randall Monroe acquired xkcd.xyz tho.
One of the teachers at my faculty has his academic website, including course materials, on an .xyz domain.
Oh, there is a website where somebody created Doom with CSS and that’s a .xyz but that tracks, because it’s 3D
I’m on lemmy.zip, has been swell.
The whole zip malware hype never came to be. Try it out, your Outlook isn’t replacing xyz.zip with a link.
I guess you could manually create a link, but those have never been safe before either as the text can be different from the URL.
I think the complaint is it’s just needlessly confusing and ambiguous.
Like everyone would obviously have an issue with it if they introduced a TLD of .txt or .jpg so why is this acceptable?
It really doesn’t matter in my opinion.
If you get an email and there is a link that just says “myfile.zip”, you wouldn’t click it, right? Email doesn’t support links for attachments, so it would be a web link either way. And behind that link it can be whatever, like “https://malicioussite.com/download/virus”. Actual email attachments have their own spot in your email client.
On top of that, any URL can download a file. If you go to https://fakegoogle.com it doesn’t even have to be .zip or .jpg, the moment you get there I could start a download in your browser.
No it’s not that URL will download a file it’s that a URL can pretend to be a file download.
Then all I need to do is build a website that looks like a word or something, and ask users to fill out their personal address form or something.
It’s about the lowest common denominator, and the public are the very most common denominator. Why make life easier for scammers?
It’s not like there’s a legitimate reason for a .zip domain
No it’s not that URL will download a file it’s that a URL can pretend to be a file download.
Every URL can pretend to be a file download…
I can give you https://mydomain.com/photo.jpg and then deliver you a webpage instead of a .jpg file. The web server decides what you get in return.
Yeah, that domain screams scam emails to me.
here, mr boomer target, click this file
it’s a link that redirects to something else
I was surprised it took almost an entire day before appleinvoice. zip got snatched up🤣 I wonder how much appleinvoice or microsoft agreement is worth to some scammer.
Probably not as much as something more generic like “invoices”, “emails”, “communications”
Edit: I didn’t mean to make it a link lol… I actually have the domain blocked until I need a use for it.
.app has been a thing for a while as well…
There are people who use (regex) blocking for the zip TLD and that other one that google released with it, for the reason that they can be very deceptive.
It’s not that hard. Because people out there are still buying domains like tomandkatesfamouspizzacincinattiohio.net
Please don’t work please don’t work.
I have a few .coms that aren’t random letters, that are less than 8 characters. Got em mostly in the last decade.
I own candidvideosofouremployeesjerkingoff.com.
Can’t believe it hadn’t been nabbed yet.
“Weird” TLDs tend to be cheaper. .social is also supposed to be made for this in the first place
icecream.social is available, and I really want it, but I just can’t justify the $800 a year, even if the name is amazing.
That’s insanely expensive. I suspect that icream.socal is a lot cheaper.
“cheaper”
Anything that is desirable is going to be more expensive. I share initials with a certain shoe company and a comic book company. Getting any domain name with my initials, even one of the “cheaper” TLDs is insanely expensive. Like $60K USD a year expensive.
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You got me!
The real reason is because it’s expensive to get a short and good .com name and also because it’s very corporate and boring.
Commercial sites have .COM
Why do porn sites not have .CUM?
Ehm, .xxx works fine for them. (And there’s more pr0n then male oriented hetro pr0n)
Hmmm, x.xxx as mastodon server just to annoy extwitter.
XTwitter
xitter?
AKA former user
Because porn sites are commercial sites.
hmm… lemmynsfw.com
FOSS people have…weird taste in naming stuff. See: GIMP, GNU, et al.,
Wtf is an ubuntu
Ubuntu is a South African ethical ideology focusing on people’s allegiances and relations with each other. The word comes from the Zulu and Xhosa languages.
Wtf is lemmy 🗿
It’s the home of a gnome
FLOSS
FIFY
A thing y’all need to do more
Thanks, but I’ll stick with my irrigator… Ciao bye
Based
Basé et dentiste pillé!
Basé et approuvé par 9 dentistes sur 10
I’m a fan of the ones that are just letters. uzbl…srcpy…others that I can’t think of off the top of my head.
I’m sure I read on the scrcpy readme at some stage that the author intentionally chose that name to be as unpronounceable as possible after their first big project, gnirehtet. Can’t find a source now though.
(Unpronounceable and also i can’t even spell it right…damn.)
Pretty sure i read that in the github too. Never heard of the other program. Might have to grab it when i get home just in case i need it some day and can’t remember what it’s called.
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How much this fucked up people hoarding interesting urls like menu.com and others?
There is an entire industry “domaining” that trades domain names like baseball cards. It usually boils down to two things:
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People register pdrq.com because they hope someone will have a wonderful new product named PDRQ later and will pay $10,000 for a domain that cost them $11.
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Even if there’s no direct buyer, there are services that will run low-quality ads on the page. and you can more or less estimate traffic and revenue from typos or dead links pointing to the domain. A three character domain, all letters, will get more than 12 characters with random digits mixed in. If you get $12 a year of random clicks seeing ads for “hot singles in your area offering PDRQ”, you’re ahead and can justify holding it as part of a portfolio.
Which really illustrates how much of a bubble waiting to burst online advertising is. Ads on pages like those don’t translate into any real-world value for anyone. The advertisers are paying out but they’re not actually gaining any sales/users for their money at all because no-one is mistyping a website name, then clicking an advert on the crappy-looking page that comes up, and then deciding to buy/use a product/service from that advert.
Based on my discussions with some domainers I’ve met, the ads themselves haven’t been profitable for the past 5+ years. Their renewals are done at a loss until they make a sale, which covers a few year’s worth of renewals on all their domains. It’s not as profitable as it used to be with all the new gTLDs out there
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I managed to get seliaste.com for pretty cheap, idk if I got lucky
lemm.ee’s admin is Estonian, so that one at least makes sense.
They look better and more quirky than the “usual” ones. Also, sometimes they might be even cheaper
Uh, I think they’re always cheaper!
Definitely not. Some examples (actual prices I pay for my various domains):
- com: $18/y (gTLD)
- net: $19/y (gTLD)
- de: ~$5/y (ccTLD)
- re: ~$5/y (ccTLD)
- design: $49/y
- tech: $55/y
- blue: $23/y
I think this depends largely on the domain name … So I’m not sure this data is all that enlightening out of context.
My data just serves as a counter point to the argument “new domains are always cheaper”. Of course it depends on the domain and how greedy a particular NIC is to create a text file on a server.
I guess it’s a matter of semantics on the word “always”. You are technically right, it isn’t 100% of the time. But 99% or even 90% is still good enough for conventional wisdom, which might be the other interpretation here (especially in contrast to the assertion of it’s “sometimes” cheaper).
Where? I never see the weird stuff cheaper than gTLD’s
I think I got my .fun for about £2 from names.co.uk usually price for a .com is £30.
I’ve found most weird TLDs are cheaper than classic ones, but there are some exceptions (.app and .io comes to mind)
Cost of domain name tends to be cheaper with more obscure Top Level Domains (TLDs). .com .org .net TLDs are expensive because they are popular and high in demand. You have to rent them out most of the time. Many are already claimed so you either have to buy the owner out or wait till they stop paying and it expires if you really want it, .xyz is very cheap and uncommon on the other hand thus pennies on the dime per year to rent. Also depending on where you live and your occupation you can actually get a domain name for free through registering with specific services that actually for real own the Top Level Domains. If you are a citizen of a certain country you can get a .us or .cad or .eu .ml domain ect either for free or very very cheap.
Check out this list for all TLDs and if you qualify for one for free. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Internet_top-level_domains
Heres a free domain name registar thats quite promising from the looks of it, most likely the one that lemmy.ml uses https://www.freenom.com/en/index.html?lang=en
Do not use Freenom. They notoriously revoke domain names on high traffic sites and without notice.
http://www.freenom.com/en/doc_tcpaid_freenom_v0100.pdf https://www.reddit.com/r/freenom/comments/107qzn1/freenom_is_out_of_order_and_it_made_my_domains/
And ICANN let’s them?
Why does ICANN allow so many weird domains to begin with? Domains used to be a good way to tell if you were going to the legit website.
.com - commercial entity .gov - government only .edu - educational entities only .net - network providers (ISP) only .org - non profit only
Those days are gone.
Now there’s Startrek.website and Startrek.com — how does the user know which one is owned by Paramount/Star Trek?
I feel like that’s been the case for a while now. You pretty much need a search engine and some sort of bookmarks tool to use the web.
I don’t know immediately if The Verges website URL contains a “the” or if BBC uses a .com or a .uk. I search both when looking for news at work so I don’t accidentally end up on porn.
For me, it’s the .zip domain. (recently added at the request of google)
That one in particular is a bomb waiting to blow. Is this link to a webpage or to a malicious download? Who knows! Guess we’ll just have to click on it and see if anything starts downloading.
Using file extensions for your TLD should be a big no-no for a lot of reasons, that being one of them.
Using file extensions for your TLD should be a big no-no for a lot of reasons, that being one of them.
That is what I said about .com.
Yeah but nobody uses .com files anymore. Its a dead format. Any that still do are for specific users and rare instances.
But they were still in wide use when the world wide web was born.
huh, Windows still distributes a handful of .com programs. Neat.
I liked .com back in the day because it was easy to write assembly and dump it through the MSDOS ‘debug’ program to create an executable.
.com is a file format?
At one point it time. Back in the early Windows days it was how applications were distributed. These days it’s all .exe files.
.com was a common file extension for MS-DOS executables, which was still in common use when the Internet started taking off.
Are you aware that opening any webpage, regardless of TLD, can cause a file to start downloading?
That’s the best thing ever - next let’s do .exe.
Hasn’t .com always been the commerce/business. Would a Google search for Star Trek actually bring you to Startrek.website? It seems like anyone with half a brain would know the difference. Legit companies/entities are going to stick to known domains.
Most TLDs have no requirements. .gov is special.
Because marketing dweebs in powerful companies now own the internet.
That’s not how the internet works. Any schmuck can buy those domain names except for .gov and .edu
I’m not an ISP, but I can get any .net domain for $11 a year. And then put ads and malware on the site. If someone else hadn’t snatched it already I could even register disney.net if I wanted to. There is zero guarantee that Disney is behind a Disney domain.
You’ll also find a hundred other Disney domains that are not owned by Disney. Big companies usually register a handful of domains for countries they do business in. And darn, some guy already registered disney.world :)
.ie is another one, you can’t get them from a lot of registrars and have to prove you’re genuinely based in Ireland.
It’s the way it used to work. Re-read my comment. That was my point.
It didn’t. I can’t find a single reference that .net registration was ever restricted to networking companies at all (it might be the intention of the name, but there was never a requirement for it). Same for .com, you could just register them back in the day too.
Hell, .net was even free to register at first before they started charging for domains.
Well one is a forum with a little mouse at the top and the other one is a website with official logos, branding, a shop, and news.
You’re not gonna get recommended startrek.website unless you’re specifically looking for it or a star trek lemmy instance in general.
i own a .xyz domain, the .com equivalent was 50 times more expensive
New gTLDs have been released constantly since ICANN dropped the restriction. Also consider that a lot of Lemmy instances are run by individuals as a side project. That means they’ll reuse or nab whatever cool sounding domain they can get to spin up their new instance as quickly as possible. Corporate websites might pause and consider a more “marketable” domain.
Personal theory of mine is
*.itjust.works
meant to stand for “It Just Works” until they decided to give this Lemmy thing a go.Personal theory of mine is
*.itjust.works
meant to stand for “It Just Works” until they decided to give this Lemmy thing a go.Yep it’s referencing a meme that originated almost a decade ago. https://youtu.be/nVqcxarP9J4
Registration and renewal cost plus more availability, most shorter names are taken on the older tlds.
I came up with mine by scrolling through tldlist comparing prices and going with the first idea that popped in my head.
What better place for people to get together and have fun? No … it was cheap and domain name was available.
Because people think domain hacks are cool, and also, gTLDs are usually more expensive.