| DNS Structure:
Country Code Domains In addition to
the global top-level domains, there are a whole
bunch of two-level domains for the different
countries of the world. Some of them let people
register directly under them as second-level
domains, while others have a more deeply nested
structure. Some limit registrations to residents
of the appropriate country, while others are open
worldwide. Much other variation in domain policy
exists.
.us -- US Country Domain The United States of
America's .us domain is registered via nic.us,
and has traditionally been subdivided
geographically. Other than a few specialized
categories such as community colleges and Native
American tribes, most users were supposed to
register under their hometown, with domains like
yourname.shreveport.la.us, so that what you
register is a fourth-level domain under your city
(or county), state, and country. These are much
cheaper to register than the .com domains (often
free, though this varies by locality), but are
lengthier. However, these domains might be a good
choice if you want your site to be geographically
identified. Many people register domains like
joeschmoe-of-milwaukee.com where
joeschmoe.milwaukee.wi.us would have been more
logical. The usual objection is that more users
are familiar with .com domains, but that's
self-fulfilling; of course people won't be
familiar with .us domains if nobody ever uses
them, but if lots of people start using them as
site addresses, public awareness would follow,
and people would become better-educated about the
hierarchical structure of the domain name system
in general.
However, that structure has now changed -- a new
registry provider has been selected by contract
of the U.S. Department of Commerce (the winning
registry is the same one that runs the new .biz
TLD), and they are now offering registrations
directly at the second level, like yourname.us.
They had a trademark-owners-only sunrise phase
(similar to that of the .info TLD, but only for
owners of U.S. trademarks, not globally),
followed by first-come, first-served
registration, for which various registrars took
queued requests over the weeks and months
preceding that. Names like help.us -- with.us
have some "cute" subdomain
possibilities, like grow.with.us or
fool.around.with.us. But don't try anything
ending in "-r.us... the Toys "R"
Us people have a very aggressive legal
department.
Legislation that recently passed Congress will
establish a .kids.us subdomain in which only
child-friendly sites can register. No act of
Congress, however, was needed for the registrant
of protozoa.us to offer subdomains for sites that
are safe for protozoans.
Neustar, the company that runs the .us domain,
has recently been placed in charge of China's .cn
domain as well, and will be throwing that domain
open to registrations without any Chinese nexus
requirement.
Similarly to .us, Canada had a hierarchical
system for its .ca domain, but allowed companies
and organizations that are nationwide in scope to
register directly under .ca, and province-wide
organizations to register within a province
subdomain (like .on.ca), instead of making
everyone register within a city. In 2000, a new
plan liberalized this to allow unlimited
registration directly under .ca (as is now being
done in .us).
Both .us and .ca require some sort of connection
with their respective countries in order to
register there. Individuals wishing to register
must be either citizens or residents;
multinational corporations need to at least have
a contact address in the given country.
Countries other than the United States and Canada
rarely used geographical hierarchies; they
usually, right off the bat, allowed either direct
second-level registration or registered at the
third level beneath logical subdivisions like
.co.uk and .org.uk for commercial and
noncommercial sites in the U.K. respectively.
They vary a lot as to the degree, if any, of
local presence needed for registration by
foreigners.
It's not actually necessary for an entity to be a
real country in order to have a country code.
Antarctica has the .aq domain. Another
not-really-a-country with a country code is the
Palestinian Authority, with .ps (they used to
have a site at gov.ps, but it hasn't worked
lately, maybe because of all the problems they've
been having at their headquarters these days).
The European Union is about to inaugurate a .eu
domain. There's a big debate going on about
whether to terminate the still-existent .su
domain for the Soviet Union. Other Country Codes
Some country-code domains are open to
registrations from people having no connection
with that country, and this can be used as a
revenue source by small countries with little
need for the namespace domestically. Tonga (.to)
is one such domain that's available to people
worldwide. Turkmenistan made its .tm domain
available internationally, with particular appeal
to companies with trademarks ("tm"),
but registrations have been put on hold after the
Turkmenistan government objected to some
"obscene" domains being registered.
More recently, Tuvalu's .tv domain was sold
(actually leased for a 10-year period) to an
American company for millions of dollars, and
they're now auctioning off the most desirable
names there rather than just letting anyone grab
them cheaply like other registrars generally have
done. There are similar registries at .fm and
.am, belonging to the Federated States of
Micronesia and Armenia respectively.
.tk, belonging to the island nation of Tokelau,
is giving away "free" domains
(supposedly in keeping with the tribal values of
that island where everything is shared), but
there are lots of catches attached, and many of
the "good names" are reserved to be
registered at a price.
Since some of the country codes are two-letter
words in English or other languages, this has
been taken advantage of by various people who
have set up "redirection services"
under addresses like go.to, here.is, i.am,
start.at, or for Spanish-speaking people,
pagina.de and espacio.de. The idea is to follow
such an address with your site name:
http://go.to/mysite, which is set up to redirect
to your real site address. Many of these
addresses are available free, but you're at the
mercy of the service that provides the redirect,
which could go out of business or impose a really
annoying popup ad on visitors.
The television networks and other things that get
.tv domains could be in trouble in a few years --
the island of Tuvalu is in the process of sinking
into the ocean due to global warming, and its
population already has plans to evacuate. If the
country stops existing, then that will open the
debate about whether its domain should be
deleted, just as that debate is now progressing
over the .su (Soviet Union) domain. Thus, .tv
registrants should probably keep up on what
happens to .su as an advance warning about what
might happen to them. DNS Server Requirements
The global TLDs (.com, etc.) require two DNS
server addresses in the registration record (a
primary and a secondary), but the registrars
don't actually check that those servers respond
to requests for the domain; you can get away with
registering domains with anybody's server in the
record, though they won't actually work unless
whoever's in charge of that server sets up the
DNS over there. Country code domains can vary in
their requirements. The Mexican domain registrar,
for instance (.mx), requires only one DNS server
address, but actually checks it during the
registration process to make sure it responds to
requests for that domain, so you need to get your
hosting provider to set up DNS before you
register the domain. This may be one of the
reasons there is less cybersquatting and other
domain abuse in the .mx domain than in the global
ones (but then again it may just be that
cybersquatters and domain abusers, even when
they're Mexican, don't care as much about .mx
addresses as .com ones...)
Conflicts
As with other domain names, there have been some
conflicts over country code domains.
One interesting conflict occurred in 2000 as
ICANN got set to launch new top level domains. As
one of the proposals (ultimately accepted) was
for a .biz domain (for businesses), a company in
St. Louis sued ICANN, claiming to have obtained
contract rights from the country of Belize to
operate its .bz country code registry, and that a
.biz domain would be confusingly similar to it
and hence a violation of trademark law. ICANN
disagreed strongly with this claim, saying that
.bz was for the use of the country of Belize, not
to stand for "business", that country
code domain registries were delegated the
responsibility of running such registries, but
didn't own the domains involved, that the U.S.
Patent and Trademark Office has specifically
denied the trademarkability of top level domains,
and that the complaining company wasn't even the
current delegated operator of the Belize TLD. The
court refused to issue an injunction to stop the
.biz domain.
There's also an ongoing debate about ICANN taking
control of the country code domains, most of
which existed long before ICANN was around, and
many of which resent having a US-based
organization be able to dictate rules and demand
payments from them. In 2001, the .au country code
domain (Australia) was taken away from its
long-standing operator, an individual associated
with a university, and given to an Australian
nonprofit group founded to operate that domain.
Since then, the new organization has agreed to
sign an agreement with ICANN, and ICANN has a
forum section to discuss it. Foreign-Language
Domains
The expansion of the DNS to character sets
outside the "US-ASCII" letters and
numbers is a hot topic these days. This isn't
technically related to country code domains
(while these new "internationalized"
domains may be used in country codes, they're
also being used in global TLDs such as .com), but
it does relate to making the domain name system
more international in nature.
A company called I-DNS claims to be making
available domain registration in foreign
languages using character sets that aren't legal
for traditional domain names. They do this by
using servers that translate such "foreign
domains" to ASCII character strings. And the
resulting translated domains, like
L6FDP645L316L7DFL40D.L16CL3F8, seem to have
top-level domains like .L16CL3F8 (an ASCII
encoding of a Chinese string that presumably
means something similar to .com), which don't
actually exist in the "official" domain
name system. This is still an experimental system
which might catch on in countries where it's
useful, but could fragment the domain name system
if it does. Registrations for Chinese domains
under this system are being taken at
chinese-dns.com. There's already a heated
political conflict, as the Chinese government
wants monopoly rights to domains in the Chinese
language worldwide. That's not really fair; they
have control, properly, of the .cn country-code
domain, but shouldn't have any specific control
of any other domain, even if it's in Chinese, any
more than England should have control of anything
worldwide that's in the English language.
There are other, incompatible schemes in progress
for internationalized domain names, some of which
only work on particular browsers, and thus aren't
really a full part of the Internet. There is a
forum area on the ICANN site to discuss this
topic. One current scheme for internationalized
domains uses the RealNames resolution system,
which presently only works for users of Microsoft
Internet Explorer, leaving other browser users
out of luck and also preventing use for such
things as e-mail and FTP.
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