Dynadot

1 letter .COM domains

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NEW YORK (AP) -- Although Internet domain names may be getting longer or more complex as Web sites creatively squeeze into the crowded ".com" address space, most single-letter names like "a.com" and "b.com" remain unused.

That may soon change as the Internet's key oversight agency considers lifting restrictions on the simplest of names.

In response to requests by companies seeking to extend their brands, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers will chart a course for single-letter Web addresses as early as this weekend, when the ICANN board meets in Vancouver, British Columbia. Those names could start to appear next year.

But the transition won't be easy -- and it could lead to six-figure sales of this new online real estate, akin to opening New York's Central Park to development.

"Obviously this is a valuable commodity," said Kurt Pritz, ICANN's vice president for business operations. "How would the name be sold?"

Names are normally released on a first-come, first-served basis for $10 or less, a policy that favors those who have written programs to automatically and frequently check for a name's availability. Auctioning names to the highest bidder is one possibility.

ICANN also must decide whether companies need to seek such names individually if they want them across all suffixes, including ".com," ".info" and ".biz."

Single-letter names under ".com," ".net" and ".org" were set aside in 1993 as engineers grew concerned about their ability to meet the expected explosion in demand for domain names. They weren't sure then whether a single database of names could hold millions -- more than 40 million in the case of ".com" today.

Six single-letter names already claimed at the time -- "q.com," "x.com, "z.com," "i.net," "q.net," and "x.org" -- were allowed to keep their names for the time being.

One idea was to create a mechanism for splitting a single database into 26 -- one corresponding to each letter. So instead of storing the domain name for The Associated Press under ".org," it would go under "a.org." In other words, "ap.org" would become "ap.a.org."

Now, engineers have concluded that won't be necessary. They have seen the address database grow to hold millions of names without trouble, so they are now willing to let go of the single-letter names they had reserved.

(There are no immediate plans to release two-letter combos that have been reserved under some suffixes -- they were set aside not for technical reasons but to avoid confusion with two-letter country-code suffixes such as ".fr" for France.)

Meanwhile, a handful of companies have asked ICANN to free up the single characters. Overstock.com Inc., for instance, prefers a single-letter brand of "o.com" because its newer businesses no longer fit its original mission of providing discounts on excess inventory.

The ICANN board must now decide whether and how to release the names. At its meeting Sunday, it could ask staff to come up with a proposal or refer the matter to an ICANN committee for further study.

Matt Bentley, chief executive of domain name broker Sedo.com LLC, said single-letter ".com" names could fetch six-figure sums, and a few might even command more than $1 million from some of the Internet's biggest companies. Yahoo Inc. applied for a trademark to "y.com" this year.

"Obviously there's nothing more exquisite than names that are in extremely rare supply like that," Bentley said. "They would have a lot of cachet as a brand name. I could see there would be tons of demand."
 
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WoW! It will be amazing to see these names back up and running, it seemed a waste not to have them there, it will complete the internet :)

Companies likely to get the names, if any, my bet's are on...

A.com - Apple.com Or rightly said, possibly Amazon.com
B.com - DIY.com (B&Q)
C.com - Cnet.com
D.com - Dlink.com
E.com - Ebay.com
F.com - Ford.com
G.com - Google.com
H.com - Hotmail.com
I.com - Icann.com
J.com - Jaguar.com
K.com - Kawasaki.com
L.com - LOreal.com
M.com - Microsoft/MSN.com
N.com - NBC.com
O.com - O2.com
P.com - Peugeot.com
Q.com - [Already occupied]
R.com - Ryanair.com
S.com - Dont know...
T.com - Toshiba.com
U.com - Dont know...
V.com - Volvo.com
W.com - Dont know...
X.com - [Already occupied]
Y.com - Yahoo.com
Z.com - [Already occupied]

Shall we set bets now? :)
 
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Jiblob said:
WoW! It will be amazing to see these names back up and running, it seemed a waste not to have them there, it will complete the internet :)

Companies likely to get the names, if any, my bet's are on...

A.com - Apple.com Or rightly said, possibly Amazon.com
B.com - DIY.com (B&Q)
C.com - Cnet.com
D.com - Dlink.com
E.com - Ebay.com
F.com - Ford.com
G.com - Google.com
H.com - Hotmail.com
I.com - Icann.com
J.com - Jaguar.com
K.com - Kawasaki.com
L.com - LOreal.com
M.com - Microsoft/MSN.com
N.com - NBC.com
O.com - O2.com
P.com - Peugeot.com
Q.com - [Already occupied]
R.com - Ryanair.com
S.com - Dont know...
T.com - Toshiba.com
U.com - Dont know...
V.com - Volvo.com
W.com - Dont know...
X.com - [Already occupied]
Y.com - Yahoo.com
Z.com - [Already occupied]

Shall we set bets now? :)
i dont think that those companies will only compete for them, other companies will too since their are alot of the same letter companies for example A.com can go to amazon, aol, allstate, apple, aflac, and others.
 
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Do you think is it going to be possible that one person regs all or most of these?
 
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redz said:
i dont think that those companies will only compete for them, other companies will too since their are alot of the same letter companies for example A.com can go to amazon, aol, allstate, apple, aflac, and others.

Certainly, the above I have listed are who I personally feel will get them. Sure there will be competitors, these are companies that sprung to my mind :)
 
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Was why did you start two threads on this same topic?
 
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Jiblob said:
WoW! It will be amazing to see these names back up and running, it seemed a waste not to have them there, it will complete the internet :)

Companies likely to get the names, if any, my bet's are on...

A.com - Apple.com Or rightly said, possibly Amazon.com
B.com - DIY.com (B&Q)
C.com - Cnet.com
D.com - Dlink.com
E.com - Ebay.com
F.com - Ford.com
G.com - Google.com
H.com - Hotmail.com
I.com - Icann.com
J.com - Jaguar.com
K.com - Kawasaki.com
L.com - LOreal.com
M.com - Microsoft/MSN.com
N.com - NBC.com
O.com - O2.com
P.com - Peugeot.com
Q.com - [Already occupied]
R.com - Ryanair.com
S.com - Dont know...
T.com - Toshiba.com
U.com - Dont know...
V.com - Volvo.com
W.com - Dont know...
X.com - [Already occupied]
Y.com - Yahoo.com
Z.com - [Already occupied]

Shall we set bets now? :)

H.com hotmail would be wrong since its changing its name.. I hope its hummer :D
 
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don't quite understand the statement about overstock.com. What is it saying?

wasistdas said:
NEW YORK (AP) -- Although Internet domain names may
....
Overstock.com Inc., for instance, prefers a single-letter brand of "o.com" because its newer businesses no longer fit its original mission of providing discounts on excess inventory.
"
 
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Jiblob said:
A.com - Apple.com Or rightly said, possibly Amazon.com
B.com - DIY.com (B&Q)
C.com - Cnet.com
D.com - Dlink.com
E.com - Ebay.com
F.com - Ford.com
G.com - Google.com
H.com - Hotmail.com
I.com - Icann.com
J.com - Jaguar.com
K.com - Kawasaki.com
L.com - LOreal.com
M.com - Microsoft/MSN.com
N.com - NBC.com
O.com - O2.com
P.com - Peugeot.com
Q.com - [Already occupied]
R.com - Ryanair.com
S.com - Dont know...
T.com - Toshiba.com
U.com - Dont know...
V.com - Volvo.com
W.com - Dont know...
X.com - [Already occupied]
Y.com - Yahoo.com
Z.com - [Already occupied]

Shall we set bets now? :)

nice list...

Now, name any word in the english language beginning with the letter 'B' ? - and Botatoe dont count :) :red:
 
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it is saying Overstock brands by calling them self the BIG o and has a female spokesperson who implie maybe the bIG O is an orgasm over their great prices they do not want to be looked at how they started buying out merchandise from failed .coms at pennies on the dollar.

I don't think companies with a Three letter acronym will want the L.com like UPS for U, I think Overstock will pay up for O , and I do not think just a brand will take it Hummer would not get H I think Hershey or Heinz would bid top dollar. MOnsanto for M Microsoft has MSN. People do not associate all these brands with one letter Overstock and Yahoo are focusing some branding efforts there but not most. B Bank Of AMERICA maybe, R Ryder Trucks over Ryan Air Ryder could buy ryan air 50 times over, W Walmart T target G Gillette it is their stock Symbol P Primerica D Diebold the ATM maker or maybe DOVER corp, Deutsche Telecom. N NOKIA NBC good CHOICe too but owned by GE and NBC is known by three letters 1 does not make sense IMO
 
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Any chance Elequa could come in and buy them up ? Would look quite nice alongside his i.net.
 
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I think it will be a whole fight for 1 letter domains. I can predivt many of them will be auctioned for $xx,xxx,xxx.
 
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Cant wait to see what happeneds :)
 
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I dont think they are going to be auctioned. There will be people with their eyes on these domains, they will accept offers on the names.

And there's no way one person will get all of those names... I don't think ICANN wouldn't allow that one IMHO.
 
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Can't wait, but nobody will get these.. only big companies with lots of money will! :td:

Can't wait for further news tho ;)
 
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unfortunately, the value of these names is being under stated, the media coverage of any release of single letter .com's will ensure the bidding goes into an incredible sphere. id say probably all of them will be 6 figure sales.

And not worth it imo
 
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Just guessing what will be the price of these domain..i am sure they are going to break all the records
 
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No doubt. For every letter there will be a whole battle. Name any letter and see what big companies ma ybe interested. Moreover, every company will pretend for all the gTLDs.
 
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