Domain Empire

poll Will .com (dot com) be King in 2017?

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☀ Will .com (dot com) be King in 2017❓

  • 1st

    Yes of course

    165 
    votes
    89.2%
  • 2nd

    New extension will take over

    18 
    votes
    9.7%
  • 3rd

    No of course not

    votes
    2.7%

Michael Ehrhardt

Top Member
Impact
3,851
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
The current generations will remember the catchyness of the .com domain enough for it to remain popular. The generation after millennials might not be so kind to .com.

who is the current generation ? :xf.wink:
 
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I was careful to pluralize generations. In my opinion, everyone who experienced the internet a few years before the new TLDs will continue to cherish .com knowingly or unknowingly.
 
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I think the interesting questioin is -what will happen to doain names when the Internet forks. With increasing polarisation in the world, and conflicts in opinions of acceptable behavious and political ideals, it is likely that the Internet will split. Will China still want .coms when they are using "AsiaNet"?
 
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With increasing polarisation in the world, and conflicts in opinions of acceptable behavious and political ideals, it is likely that the Internet will split. Will China still want .coms when they are using "AsiaNet"?

That is highly unlikely. Firstly, the internet is at the core of globalization and global trade. Both of those would have to come to a standstill for the internet to split. If China does decide to use "AsiaNet," it will find itself very very alone. Not even neighboring countries (perhaps, except the hermit state) will benefit from a restricted Chinese-controlled network. In the process of creating this AsiaNet or China-And-North-Korea net, it may irreversibly find itself in an economic slump. Not many countries want to be in a trade union or any union with China, let alone a restricted computer network.

Secondly, the polarization we've seen in the world whether it's Brexit, the EU's problems, the US election, the Syrian war, problems in the Middle East, economic problems in Africa, or corruption in South Korea, you'll notice one thing in common. The polarization tends to be within a region or country. In a silly way, that seems to suggest people would be more comfortable connecting to others on the internet rather than some of those within their own country.

I think the real issue at hand would be balancing nationalism. Over the past few centuries, large regions have divided and united under the influence of nationalism. Through various eras such imperialism, the world wars, and the cold war, countries have developed a sense of nationalism. However, nationalism does have its limits. It represents an imaginary Utopia where large or small groups of people can get along extremely well. For the most patriotic, this collaboration is so great that it makes themselves feel superior over competing nations.

Nationalism itself is not bad, and has worked well for us in many ways. (You'll even find me getting defensive and nationalist if I feel anything unjust about the U.S has been posted lol.) But the point is that countries around the world need to realize that nationalism has to be balanced and should not represent a Utopia where every gets along. By accepting that, countries can develop ways to recognize and handle its differences so that everyone gets along.
 
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Thanks for that reply - my post was a bit tongue in cheek, but your reply does raise some interesting points.
Firstly, "AsiaNet" could co-exist with the current Internet, and with the increase in control and suppression of controversial opinion, there may even be a DarkNet as well. I'm sure browsers could cope with switching between routes. We are seeing quite a few major shifts emerging - the PetroRuble is already an alternative to the PetroDollar, and its use may increase over the next few years. America's attempts to block Chinese membership of the IMF led to the creation of the AIIB, and on 30th September 2016 the IMF allowed the Renminbi to join the basket of currencies for SDRs. But it's a bit late, and the world will run with these two changes
 
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i sold way more mew domain extensions than .com ( classic domains )
for me .com is not King

WHY ?
WHY? You want to know WHY? Because your ahead of the curve. One step ahead. That,s WHY (y)
 
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Thanks for that reply - my post was a bit tongue in cheek, but your reply does raise some interesting points.
Firstly, "AsiaNet" could co-exist with the current Internet, and with the increase in control and suppression of controversial opinion, there may even be a DarkNet as well. I'm sure browsers could cope with switching between routes. We are seeing quite a few major shifts emerging - the PetroRuble is already an alternative to the PetroDollar, and its use may increase over the next few years. America's attempts to block Chinese membership of the IMF led to the creation of the AIIB, and on 30th September 2016 the IMF allowed the Renminbi to join the basket of currencies for SDRs. But it's a bit late, and the world will run with these two changes

I can see nations wanting to develop national networks for the sake of security and protection against cyber warfare. However, that would require a lot of infrastructure improvements.

Hopefully, the IMF and the AIIB find some common ground and don't become competitors. The IMF was never really able to satisfy the needs of the entire globe. Wouldn't be nice if they supplement each other? But that may be wishful thinking lol.
 
0
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a Trademark Department doesn,t even check if you have any rights
and wich domain extension ???
a TM doesn,t include a domain name ( .com or whatever )

to register a TM you just apply and pay 300$
if they deny you lose that money

that,s why i don,t like any kind of TM
i spend a lot of time in DPMA ( german TM department )

it,s a money machine
nothing else

i try to find that article ...
Some TM's owner abused TM right; and other people used TM to steal domain. Some panel are just too lazy to look at the whole picture; and they can care less. The whole TM process and the governance are all games. Trademark businesses shouldn't allow to trademark common and dictionary words; also trademark people should brutally honest to their customers. Perhaps telling them, that you trademark one name, this doesn't mean you own the world's encyclopedia :rage:
 
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Agree! Why do you think Uniregistry, owned by a well known domainer, uses Unirgistry.com, instead of Uniregistry.sexy or uniregistry.link or uniregistry.click Uniregistry.tattoo
Why? Frank those extensions, doesn't he?
You're missing the whole point of gTLDs...Uniregistry makes no sense in any extension except .com
Gtld are cool for brands in my opinion. Tshirt brand, artist brand, Vanity names, product brand. Yet I haven't seen many being used.
But then you get it!

So, we are getting somewhere..:)
 
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You're missing the whole point of gTLDs...Uniregistry makes no sense in any extension except .com

But then you get it!

So, we are getting somewhere..:)

Yes, gtlds are good for certain keywords, agree. Maybe I went a little too far, but I'm making a point that even with the keywords that make perfect sense, smart domainers aren't confident with them to the point that they would use it for their business. They can brag about how good the extension is if they own that extension, but they wouldn't use it for their company website.

Ask the registry owner of .domain. "How confident are you with your .domain extension." I bet he won't think twice. I bet he'll tell you how great it is and how successful it will be. Then follow up with a question, "would you use .domain as your registrar site?" What do you think he's going to say?
 
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Interesting : people get more offers ( sales ) on ccTLD than on unsponsored gTLD ( .com )

so why is .com still King ?

  1. *
    ccTLD ( country code top level domains like .at .be .ch .de etc )
    3 vote(s)
    100.0%
  2. gTLD ( generic top level domains unsponsored like .com .net .org .name )
    1 vote(s)
    33.3%
  3. *
    nTLD ( new top level domains like .auto .bike .club .domains etc )
    1 vote(s)
    33.3%
  4. sTLD ( sponsored top level domains like .jobs .mobi .travel etc )
    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
https://www.namepros.com/threads/do...-cctld-gtld-ntld-or-stld-domain-names.986727/

What means King ? Sales ? Bid,s ? just Popular ? Registration ? high Sales ?
 
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.Com has been established for as long as the internet has been around. There are a few extensions that can do well here and there but as far as any tld replacing the dominance of .com on the internet in 2017, that is ridiculous. It is way too early for that to happen especially with the last 20+ years of .com established already. Some killer keywords will always do well in a few of these new extensions but nothing at all equal to what the same keyword in .com would fetch.

By the way, out of your 6 domains in your signature (VR.Loans VRKinos.com VRGamesKing.com VRGameKings.com VRGamesKings.com VRHoloPortation.com), 5 of them are .com. Try selling any of those 5 domains in any other extension in 2017 and I am sure you will have your answer.
Ok, I think it's good to diversify..
VRgamers.at
VRfootball.at
VRsportslink.com
VRgamelink.com
 
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Keep your one word gtlds. I dropped a decent name, because the renewal fee was over $150 and I got no offers. Recently looked at it and a big communication company is using it. :arghh:

Keep your one word gtlds.... good advice, but what was the name ?
 
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Will .com (dot com) be King in 2017?
Yes.

But by 2025 there will be so many Kings.
 
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How long will,it be before there is a .king extension?
 
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Imagine what would happen if we opened a new thread on Namepros for every business we found using a .COM
 
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I've seen many "attacks" on the king, but it always survived... So, I still think that .com will remain the king, no matter how many other extensions will be rolled-out.
 
0
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Not just 2017 my friend, but our entire lifetime! :)
 
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trapped in a Cave ? :xf.wink:

life is changing

Lol! Ahh yes, change is the only constant. But I just can't see it happening in our lifetime. Trends will come and go, but the dot com will remain King!

:xf.wink:
 
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Lol! Ahh yes, change is the only constant. But I just can't see it happening in our lifetime. Trends will come and go, but the dot com will remain King!

:xf.wink:

thats what we thought when we had D-Mark
and suddenly there is Euro

what,s wrong on some nice changing ?
more chances for more people

that,s good
or not ?
 
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Not only will it remain king, gTLDs will raise the value of .com

Those who develop successful businesses/websites on dot-hacks will want to acquire the .com version and will be in a better position to purchase, otherwise competitors will desire the .com versions of generic domain hacks to build on (gamer.blog goes viral, gamerblog.com = worth more)

I do believe a handful of g's will get mainstream recognition/status of .org, .net as years pass.
 
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Unless sites like youtube.com / facebook.com all decide to start using .xyz and let their .coms drop - maybe, but its like trying to change the entire official language of a country - just based off the idea that some people might start learning their own languages on their own. Without some kind major issue with verisign - i dont see the wall falling for a while
 
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