Icann Domain Names – Your Questions…

http://www.internic.net/faqs/authoritative-dns.html

Laura asks…

Domain name extension?

Is it possible to own a domain name extension? Example: .tk
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Quote from another question:
You need to have thousands ready and a team to present it to ICANN. Then you have a huge percent chance (90%) that ICANN will not approve your TLD. If you are lucky and they do approve it, then you can sell your tld. Remember, ICANN requires a registration fee chunk from every domain sales (hence the reason no one gives free domains).

Good luck!
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How do they have the power to do that? The Internet is for everyone. I don’t think that’s fair that they get to “control” the Internet.

-austinyb

admin answers:

Somebody has to be in charge or the World Wide Web would collapse. ICANN does do a pretty good job, all in all.

The two letter top level domains like you mentioned are designated for countries – .ca for Canada, .us for the U.S., even .tv & .ws, which are often thought to mean television and website are actually domains for Tuvalo and Samoa. A list is here – http://www.iana.org/root-whois/index.html#t.

There is also some interesting (and in-depth) information about why the Internet is set-up the way it is at http://www.internic.net/faqs/authoritative-dns.html.

And you can read what is happening currently at http://www.internic.net/faqs/new-tlds.html. There are some changes in the works.

Cheers!

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Web Hosting – Your Questions…

Laura

Laura asks…

Web Hosting?

Hey i have a question on web hosting
question: is there any web hosting website where i can host my files and other users can download it or do whatever they want to do, but the URL or the link to the files always remains the same. No rapidshare and that kind of stuff. Some nice decent servcie with security.

admin answers:

Consider a hosting company that will give you…

(1) anonymous FTP users

(2) the ability to create multiple FTP user accounts, and designate the maximum space for each (with either shared or separate folders)

(3) possibly different accounts with a limit on bandwidth to keep users from dragging down your whole hosting account. Typically you do this by signing up as a “reseller”, which typically gives you access to a utility called Web Hosting Manager (WHM)

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