NamePros
Welcome, Guest! Ready to make a name for yourself in the domain business? We welcome both the hobbyist and professional domainer to join the discussion as part of the NamePros community.

Click here to create your profile to start earning reputation for posting, and trader ratings for buying & selling in our free e-marketplace. Build your trader rating with each successful sale. Our system has tracked over 100,000 sales and counting!
FAQ & TOS Register Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read

Go Back   NamePros.com > Domain Name Discussion Forums > Domain Names > Domain Newbies
Reload this Page *.us.com, *.uk.com, *.eu.com but no *.ca.com ?

Domain Newbies New to domain names? Have your questions answered here.

Advanced Search


Closed Thread
 
LinkBack Thread Tools
Old 09-08-2006, 01:35 AM THREAD STARTER               #1 (permalink)
NamePros Regular
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 528
psalzmann is just really nicepsalzmann is just really nicepsalzmann is just really nicepsalzmann is just really nice
 



Question *.us.com, *.uk.com, *.eu.com but no *.ca.com ?


Thought this might be a good place to start.

You can reg:
*.US.COM
*.UK.COM
*.EU.COM
*.DE.COM

But why is there no
*.CA.COM?

or is there?

Thanks
psalzmann is offline  
Old 09-08-2006, 04:31 AM   #2 (permalink)
Senior Member
 
rome2ng's Avatar
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: 1°88′N, 7°95′E
Posts: 1,388
rome2ng has much to be proud ofrome2ng has much to be proud ofrome2ng has much to be proud ofrome2ng has much to be proud ofrome2ng has much to be proud ofrome2ng has much to be proud ofrome2ng has much to be proud ofrome2ng has much to be proud of
 


Adoption
To my knowledge, no.

Thats a good question, perhaps they feel that the demand is too little.
__________________
What's a good blog ? Find out here [+++]
[http://treoo.com]- S'pore Local Gadget Store® - Now Online
For Sales : | Ads Development Site [neatad.com] -HOT |
rome2ng is offline  
Old 09-08-2006, 02:12 PM   #3 (permalink)
Senior Member
 
dhscott's Avatar
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 1,345
dhscott is a name known to alldhscott is a name known to alldhscott is a name known to alldhscott is a name known to alldhscott is a name known to alldhscott is a name known to all
 



Judging by WHOIS creation dates, i'd say they just didn't get it in time.

uk.com regged May 1996, ca.com regged February 1996.

Remember, these aren't proper extensions, they are sub-domains of .com so you don't legally own them
dhscott is offline  
Old 09-08-2006, 03:18 PM   #4 (permalink)
tm
Senior Member
 
tm's Avatar
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: on a oil rig just off Ireland
Posts: 1,408
tm is a glorious beacon of lighttm is a glorious beacon of lighttm is a glorious beacon of lighttm is a glorious beacon of lighttm is a glorious beacon of light
 



See for yourself, it's a company.
http://ca.com/
Unless they're willing to sell their domain and rebrand their business, it'll be unlikely there will be a *.ca.com any time soon.
__________________
You design in photoshop, I code into valid XHTML/CSS.
Professional PSD, PNG or HTML to tableless XHTML/CSS designs.
For more info, send me a PM.
tm is offline  
Old 09-08-2006, 04:43 PM THREAD STARTER               #5 (permalink)
NamePros Regular
Join Date: Feb 2006
Posts: 528
psalzmann is just really nicepsalzmann is just really nicepsalzmann is just really nicepsalzmann is just really nice
 



Yes, thanks to all for replying. I just couldn't "not" know what was going on so I did some investigations and it's true.

Domainers are registering 2 letter words to basically do exactly just this! It's all coming together for me now.

What a great way to jump in on the domain name business. Now, I have to ask, how the heck does a normal domain such as "us.com" able to tap into the DNS root server registries (like enom) to offer this as a VALID domain to register?

So basically (from what I gather) this is what's going on:

1. Any normal person can register xx.com or (xxx ie: web.com)
2. Any normal person can hit up the major domain registration offices and attempt to get their domain into a TLD registration format?
3. Any joe, mary or sue can register name.xx.com and it's valid?

To me this sounds like you are hosting a client on cpanel and offering them a subdomain. LOL But the true question is how are they tapping into the mainstream dns settings and configurations so people like you and me have the opportunity to register such a domain.. but using the same process we do now .. for .com, .net. etc? is there a custom whois server built for us.com and uk.com? if so this makes sense. If not, I need some answers.
????: NamePros.com http://www.namepros.com/domain-newbies/235875-us-com-uk-com-eu-com.html

What gives us.com and / or uk.com rights giving them the full control to do such things? How is this possible? and can anybody else do the same thing?

I guess the only answer to that (who knows?) is that these us.com and uk.com owners are people that are already affililated with the main root server people on the net?

Thanks for your comments!

PS - Yes I'm aware I can take my domain xxx.com and sell you yourname.xxx.com on my own site using my own cpanel, but the question here is how did us.com and uk.com actually make it available to query their whois servers like the rest (on enom)? is this a standard practice everyone and / or anyone can do?

Originally Posted by qwhois
Judging by WHOIS creation dates, i'd say they just didn't get it in time.

uk.com regged May 1996, ca.com regged February 1996.

Remember, these aren't proper extensions, they are sub-domains of .com so you don't legally own them
Hi Thanks for your comment. Just wanted to mention that as far as I'm aware on a personal level, that no domain name has a "legally owned" option. You never "own" the domains you purchase, you are "in legal terms" renting them for as long as you pay for them. I'd imagine it's the exact same deal with a sub domain. In fact, in the case of a .us.com .. there is a much greater chance to loosing the domain due to other problems that can or may arise in the future with the actual "us.com" domain name space. So from what I gathered, it's something people should actually try and stay away from. What would happen is us.com fogot to pay the bill? or was locked into a very large legal battle where they lost the domain?
????: NamePros.com http://www.namepros.com/showthread.php?t=235875

In so many words, it's like giving someone space on your actual site:
us.com/myname.

Instead, they offer it like a regular domain name: myname.us.com.

Thinking about it more now.. it's a great way for one person or company to take the domain business to a new level... but the way it's being "promoted / marketed" to me puts these guys in a position where it will only succeed with the increasing amount of .com's unavailable.

LOL, why didn't I register xxx.com when I had the chance?
psalzmann is offline  
Old 09-08-2006, 05:03 PM   #6 (permalink)
New Member
Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 9
ken135 is an unknown quantity at this point
 



lol i feel soory for the CA
ken135 is offline  
Closed Thread


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools


Liquid Web Smart Servers  
All times are GMT -7. The time now is 03:07 AM.

Managed Web Hosting by Liquid Web
Domain name forum recommended by Domaining.com Powered by: vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.6.0 Ad Management plugin by RedTyger