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According to Domainpunch, .xyz today dropped 168170 names and is now below 5 million in total. Maybe not much of a news update, but just FYI.


Lot of spam sites and spam registrations were getting dropped. Its getting clean.
This is something that a lot of people don't realise. When a TLD starts to drop speculative registrations, most of these speculative registrations had no working or developed website attached. Domains with developed websites are less likely to drop than domains with no website. Thus the web usage percentage for .XYZ will have increased as a percentage of overall registrations. However the usage in XYZ is lower than that for .COM or the ccTLDs.Lot of spam sites and spam registrations were getting dropped. Its getting clean.
2 years ago (or maybe 1), it would have. But they missed the boat.Don't look like 111bclass made much difference.
I haven't been tracking .PRO at zone file level back to 2004. I've got some registry report data and the zones from when it was included in the CZDS. It got hit with the Chinese Bubble registrations but most of them were deleted in January this year.Add .PRO (2004) into your legacy list...
It doesn't have the power of Google behind it. Google just decidd to call its corporate holding operation 'abc' and .xyz was the best gTLD to use. It has also tried to purchase the 'abc' string in other TLDs, I think. In publicity terms, it put the .XYZ gTLD on the map and gave it a boost. However, It is not a failure. In terms of marketing, .XYZ is quite good and it still has approximately 2.3 million registrations. It is not a .COM killer but the fragmentation of the market into geographical and niche gTLDs has changed things for generic TLDs. The deals that .XYZ did with various registrars to promoted discounted registrations has locked the gTLD into a Boom and Bust cycle with spikes in new registrations followed by spikes in deletions a year or so later. Nobody expected the 1 cent promotion domains to renew in large numbers. The renewal rate for discounted domain names in established gTLDs can be as low as 5% but it depends on the discount. Freebies tend to have the worst renewal rates and if this promotion comes out with over 1.5% renewals, it will be doing well. The renewal period for a gTLD domain name is approximately 45 days so the actual renewal rates won't be known until the end of the promotion date plus a year and 45 days or so. ICANN publishes the official renewal data in the registry reports and these are delayed by three months. Some of us who track registrations at a domain name level can estimate renewal rates by watching when a domain name appears as new and is then deleted from the zonefile. It is not perfect but it can show how a TLD is performing. While the deletions on .XYZ are large in terms of new gTLDs, the number of .COM domains that were once registered, deleted and never reregistered is in the hundreds of millions.It's just not a particularly appealing letter set. It's perhaps somewhat enlightening to know that a project with the weight and power of google behind it still has the potential to fail.
It doesn't have the power of Google behind it. Google just decidd to call its corporate holding operation 'abc' and .xyz was the best gTLD to use. It has also tried to purchase the 'abc' string in other TLDs, I think. In publicity terms, it put the .XYZ gTLD on the map and gave it a boost. However, It is not a failure. In terms of marketing, .XYZ is quite good and it still has approximately 2.3 million registrations. It is not a .COM killer but the fragmentation of the market into geographical and niche gTLDs has changed things for generic TLDs. The deals that .XYZ did with various registrars to promoted discounted registrations has locked the gTLD into a Boom and Bust cycle with spikes in new registrations followed by spikes in deletions a year or so later. Nobody expected the 1 cent promotion domains to renew in large numbers. The renewal rate for discounted domain names in established gTLDs can be as low as 5% but it depends on the discount. Freebies tend to have the worst renewal rates and if this promotion comes out with over 1.5% renewals, it will be doing well. The renewal period for a gTLD domain name is approximately 45 days so the actual renewal rates won't be known until the end of the promotion date plus a year and 45 days or so. ICANN publishes the official renewal data in the registry reports and these are delayed by three months. Some of us who track registrations at a domain name level can estimate renewal rates by watching when a domain name appears as new and is then deleted from the zonefile. It is not perfect but it can show how a TLD is performing. While the deletions on .XYZ are large in terms of new gTLDs, the number of .COM domains that were once registered, deleted and never reregistered is in the hundreds of millions.
Regards...jmcc
The ICANN registry reports only show transfers between registrars rather than nameservers, DNGear. The renewal calculations outside ICANN are done by looking at when a domain appears in the zonefile and if it is deleted from the zonefile around the expected renewal date.



