

Registrants of the usTLD must be either:
- A natural person (i) who is a citizen or permanent resident of the United States of America or any of its possessions or territories, or (ii) whose primary place of domicile is in the United States of America or any of its possessions, or
- An entity or organization that is (i) incorporated within one of the fifty (50) U.S. states, the District of Columbia, or any of the United States possessions or territories or (ii) organized or otherwise constituted under the laws of a state of the United States of America, the District of Columbia or any of its possessions or territories, or
- An entity or organization (including a federal, state, or local government of the United States, or a political subdivision thereof) that has a bona fide presence in the United States.
I mostly agree with this, except I would put .us after .info and then .net in the same category as everything else. If I had a choice between some ccTLD and .net, I would need to think about which one to get for a little bit. I am not a real big fan of the .net.B33R said:.com - the top dog
.info - my second favourite (32% of my names are .info)
.net - I only have 1 .net - .net doesn't fit well with the names I buy
.everything else goes here - I mean everything else, including CCTLD's
.org - I'd never make a site on .org unless it was a charity.
.eu - just above .biz - I don't like Europe so I don't like the ext. either.
.biz - right the way down the bottom, below everything. Just reminds me of dodgy businesses.
What a LOAD of old Cobblers (circa 1999)Archangel said:This is what I was told awhile back before the .be, .in etc came about. It might not fully apply any longer, so take this with a grain of salt:
.com -- 100% value
.net -- 50% value of a .com
.org -- .20% value of a .com
Everything under -- 2-10% of a .com.
I'll agree with you on that. The only reason for me not including .us or .ca is the fact that I live in the UK and although there's workarounds to get past the "no foreigners" rules, I'm working my way through .com and .info first.sjaguar13 said:I mostly agree with this, except I would put .us after .info and then .net in the same category as everything else. If I had a choice between some ccTLD and .net, I would need to think about which one to get for a little bit. I am not a real big fan of the .net.
Barefoottech said:What a LOAD of old Cobblers (circa 1999)
yes should be taken with a grain of salt
.com 100%
The rest depends on Suitablility of TLD to the intended site usage and the Name
.net anywhere from regfee to maybe 75% depending on name and targeted market
.org regfee to 100% or more if suits the targeted site (.org still has some Credibilty as Organization amongst the ill-informed websurfers)
.info 20% to 50% of .com If suits the site (I would never sell nor expect to buy .info for only 2% of .com value )
.biz .cc .tv .ws .us all are capable of high value certainly MORE than 2%
ccTLDs are the same
Try telling a German that hisname.de is only worth 2% of the equivalent .com
Myself I buy Names based on Need,Suitable name and extension ,not on some .COM is Best Mantra
My homesites are
BareFootTech.com.au <<<< For Australia
BareFootTech.net <<<<< For Rest of World
And Yes I own the .com

