Domain Empire

Single Letter Domains Soon

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Way back before the Web was born, Internet pioneer Jon Postel reserved all the single-letter domain names he could, in case they were needed for future expansion.

Postel oversaw Internet address assignments, and his successor -- the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers -- has kept the same policy. A July 2000 message from ICANN Vice President Louis Touton said single-letter names like a.com, b.com, c.com and so on are "reserved for infrastructure purposes to help ensure stable operation of the Internet."

Now, however, ICANN may be about to change its mind.

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

On one level, ICANN is responding to requests from companies that would like to snap up some of this virtual real-estate.

On another, though, this would give ICANN a windfall -- perhaps letting it auction off single-letter domains for a total of tens of millions of dollars. This follows other ways it's recently found to boost its revenue stream by levying fees on domain name owners.

Not all single-level domains are reserved. A few, like x.com and i.net, were purchased before Postel's decision in 1993 and still exist today.
 
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I was reading this article somewhere else yesterday, very interesting idea, dunno if it will take off though.
 
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how many single letter domain can be made . if u do calulations then only 26 domain per tld comes out coz there are only 26 alphabets in english language so registring these domains will be very hard and it might even be to costly. like it may be 100$ or more for a single .com
 
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tajimd said:
how many single letter domain can be made . if u do calulations then only 26 domain per tld comes out coz there are only 26 alphabets in english language so registring these domains will be very hard and it might even be to costly. like it may be 100$ or more for a single .com
Err, yea. 26 letters and 10 numbers. Plus it is possible to register 'special' charaters as names. Though even if you have 1 letter doamain, it will have more value than most domain names.

-Josh :tu:
 
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x.com belongs to Paypal but they dont use it. It redirects ti paypal.com
 
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