if you have made successfully a DIY registry you could benefit from it
by finance.
such as what "de.com", "uk.net", "in.com" does. :)
I always have a dream to buy a top-level domain from IANA and run my own
registry biz. For instance ".tomato" is my gTLD, welcome you to become
the registrar for
Let's all take a deep breath and recall that the origins of the PSL are in
web browsing, and directly tied to that invention so necessary to our
collective privacy: the cookie.
It was a list, originally maintained by Mozilla, of domains (or stems)
that you can't set cookies for.
--
Fred Mor
On 2021-12-14 at 15:46:52 UTC-0500 (Tue, 14 Dec 2021 21:46:52 +0100)
Jaroslaw Rafa
is rumored to have said:
Dnia 14.12.2021 o godz. 13:34:06 Bill Cole pisze:
For example, I could *CLAIM* to be an independent customer of
whoever runs scconsult.com as a registry, and I just "registered"
billmai
Hello,
My first post here, forgive errors :-(
I try to make working together a sympa mailing list and an inn nttp
server using postfix as MTA. sympa on a server, in and postfix on an other.
This page
https://www.sympa.org/faq/tips_and_howto#how_can_i_have_a_mailing_list_archive_on_a_news_gro
Dnia 14.12.2021 o godz. 13:06:49 Andrew Sullivan pisze:
> On Mon, Dec 13, 2021 at 12:31:07PM +0100, Jaroslaw Rafa wrote:
> >That's exactly what Public Suffix List is for. It lists all such domains.
>
> Well, to be a little more pointed about it, it attempts to provide a
> volunteer-curated list of
Dnia 14.12.2021 o godz. 13:34:06 Bill Cole pisze:
>
> For example, I could *CLAIM* to be an independent customer of
> whoever runs scconsult.com as a registry, and I just "registered"
> billmail.scconsult.com with them, and therefore am completely
> innocent of the bad behavior by some evil guy wh
On Tue, Dec 14, 2021 at 01:34:06PM -0500, Bill Cole wrote:
For example, I could *CLAIM* to be an independent customer of whoever
runs scconsult.com as a registry, and I just "registered"
billmail.scconsult.com with them, and therefore am completely innocent
of the bad behavior by some evil gu
On 2021-12-14 at 12:52:06 UTC-0500 (Tue, 14 Dec 2021 17:52:06 +)
Chris Green
is rumored to have said:
I have a mix of .co.uk, .com, .net, .org, .biz, .uk, .be and .eu
domains.
All of which are subject as domains to ICANN and/or governmental
registry rules.
Surely it's the provider of t
On 2021-12-14 at 13:10:36 UTC-0500 (Tue, 14 Dec 2021 13:10:36 -0500)
Andrew Sullivan
is rumored to have said:
Hi,
On Tue, Dec 14, 2021 at 12:35:17PM -0500, Bill Cole wrote:
On the other hand, anyone who wants to do so can buy a 2nd-level
domain in a gTLD and run a pseudo-registry like uk.co
Hi,
On Tue, Dec 14, 2021 at 12:35:17PM -0500, Bill Cole wrote:
On the other hand, anyone who wants to do so can buy a 2nd-level
domain in a gTLD and run a pseudo-registry like uk.com or eu.org for
subdomains.
Not any more in new TLDs. There's an ICANN consensus policy that is designed to p
> Surely it's the provider of the hosting who gets blacklisted not the
> 'name' of the host.
RBL public black list companies keep a database of both IP's and domain names.
While banning the IP does blacklist the hosting provider, banning the domain
name follows them no matter where they host.
Spa
On Mon, Dec 13, 2021 at 12:31:07PM +0100, Jaroslaw Rafa wrote:
That's exactly what Public Suffix List is for. It lists all such domains.
Well, to be a little more pointed about it, it attempts to provide a
volunteer-curated list of such domains. It does an amazing job for what it is,
but it'
On Tue, Dec 14, 2021 at 12:35:17PM -0500, Bill Cole wrote:
> On 2021-12-13 at 06:19:47 UTC-0500 (Mon, 13 Dec 2021 19:19:47 +0800)
> Frank Hwa
> is rumored to have said:
>
> > for the second level domain, some are "com.au", "com.hk" (the com one),
> > some are "co.uk", "co.jp" (the co one). I am n
On 2021-12-13 at 06:19:47 UTC-0500 (Mon, 13 Dec 2021 19:19:47 +0800)
Frank Hwa
is rumored to have said:
for the second level domain, some are "com.au", "com.hk" (the com
one), some are "co.uk", "co.jp" (the co one). I am not sure, isn't
there a standard for this naming?
No. The 2-letter TLDs
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