Amazon's Quest For Web Names Draws Foes 114
quantr writes in with a story about backlash to Amazon's request for ownership of new top-level domain names. "Large and small companies are vying for control of an array of new Internet domain names, but Amazon.com Inc.'s plans are coming under particular scrutiny. Two publishing industry groups, the Authors Guild and the Association of American Publishers, are objecting to the online retailer's request for ownership of new top-level domain names that are part of a long-awaited expansion of the Web's addressing scheme. They argue that giving Amazon control over such addresses—which include '.book,' '.author' and '.read'—would be a threat to competition and shouldn't be allowed. 'Placing such generic domains in private hands is plainly anti-competitive,' wrote Scott Turow, Authors Guild president, to the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, or ICANN, the nonprofit that oversees the world's Internet domain names. 'The potential for abuse seems limitless.'"
"But they gave us a LOT of money" replies ICANN (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean a SHITLOAD of money! Did YOU give us a shitload of money?
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Here we learn that there should have been ~180 top level domains, one for each country.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
This langrab is by and for corporations (Score:4, Insightful)
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Mind you it would have been a blood bath if a TLD cost $10.
Can you imagine how awful it would be?
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So the same sort of wild-west name grabs we saw with .com domain names will simply be repeated here, just on a larger scale.
Amazon is hoping that it is perceived as simply a "larger scale", and that people miss the distinction between a domain and a top-level domain.
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Given how infrequently they're used (.mobi is probably the most successful, and it isn't really necessary as most sites simply redirect you from site.mobi to mobile.site.com), it's pretty clear we don't need new TLDs. And this is just a money grab by ICANN.
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No, .int is an old TLD, for international intergovernmental organizations. The UN uses un.int, for example. It's not quite as old as the original five, but it's pretty close iirc.
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This was my suspicion too, but the revenue generated by gTLDs is going to literally be in the billions and ICANN is a non-profit.
Does anyone know how ICANN intends to spend these billions of dollars? How do non-profits with excess cash in the US work? Here in the UK if a non-profit or charity ends up with too big a cash pile it can be redistributed to similar charities - does the US have the same sort of thing? Or has ICANN published plans for expenditure of these billions it will gain to spread it's influe
Citation Needed (Score:1)
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Nice edgy comment, but what evidence do you have that ICANN was paid off?
Can you still call it "getting paid off" when the bribery is part of a contract?
The Best Internet Addresses Will Cost a Cool .Million [nytimes.com]
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Hmm. I wonder if .shitload is available...
BRB
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Hmm. I wonder if .shitload is available...
BRB
If not, .onehundredeightyfivethousanddollars is for grabs!
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Only if you have $185,000.
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How about Amazon ... (Score:5, Interesting)
And then do what they want with the subdomains book. author.
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And existed, for a few millenia, prior to Amazon, Inc.
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"Let them use .amazonriver and/or .amazonrainforest, if they wish."
Great idea! Seriously. Then the store can use .amazonshopping, or .amazonstore. ".amazon" should be reserved for women who are warriors and have had one breast removed.
Re:How about Amazon ... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:How about Amazon ... (Score:5, Funny)
Great idea! Seriously. Then the store can use .amazonshopping, or .amazonstore
Or amazoncompany. And they can then shorten it to amazon.com!
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No, that makes no sense at all. The name Amazon long pre-dates the river, being the name of a mythological tribe of warrier women who removed a breast so they could better shoot a bow.
But the name Amazon, as the name of the river, long pre-dates the website. So it does make sense.
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Serve's Brazil right for naming a forest and river after an online retailer.
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Aren't they also in a fight with Brazil over the top level domain ".amazon"? It would make sense that Brazil would want it and have a better claim to it than Amazon since they have the Amazon River and Amazon rainforest.
https://xkcd.com/1165/ [xkcd.com]
Advantage: Amazon.
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Re:How about Amazon ... (Score:5, Insightful)
So obviously what we need is some way to distinguish commercial use of the name "Amazon" from the Brazilian or organizational use of the name.
It is truly a shame that there is absolutely nothing like this.
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Your sig is particularly ironic, given that the topic is currently the Amazon (incl. rainforest).
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I'm sure Amazon, Inc will just make a deal with the Brazilian Cartels to make a black market amazon.com for them to sell their wares on. And then the govt. or Brazil will quietly let this drop.
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They're being opposed on that too. http://www.techweekeurope.co.uk/news/amazon-domain-south-america-icann-gtld-99819 [techweekeurope.co.uk]
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And then do what they want with the subdomains book. author.
I've often wondered why we don't do away with top-level suffixes completely and let entities order up whatever name they want as their own top-level domain. Yes, we'd have a whole lot of domains but do end users really need to remember that they need to add a .com or was it .org or was it .net or whatever. Yes, their would be another names mini gold rush but they could give preference to existing domain holders. Those who thought they were being treated unfairly could still argue their case before WIPO. Let
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... gets the top level domain: Amazon
And then they force all their authors to use an email address in that domain, and then all their authors get rejected from all the modern web services that use the broken email validation scripts running rampant.
Not only are ignorant web programmers making up their own limits on local-parts of an email address (e.g., "+ invalid"), they've created a 2-4 character limit on the TLD. People in .museum and .travel are already hosed, as well as anyone using an internationalized TLD that has at least one exampl
I agree... (Score:5, Funny)
the Authors Guild and the Association of American Publishers... argue that giving Amazon control over such addresses—which include '.book,' '.author' and '.read'—would be a threat to competition and shouldn't be allowed.
You know? I agree with them... of would be like /.-ers raising a kickstarter to take the .grits TLD without giving a damn on the what Natalie would think.
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Or Wilford Brimley.
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I can't even look at that dude without seeing the "diabeetus cat" meme pop into my head.
Nothing makes you feel like a bad person like laughing at jokes about terminal illness.
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Meh, living is terminal.
Laugh before it gets you.
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She'd probably make a bad ass rap video about it.
Surprise! (Score:5, Informative)
Wasn't there a lot of complaining (Score:1)
Re:What's the difference? (Score:4, Informative)
How is this any more controversial than if Amazon bought book.com, author.com, read.com? book.com is owned by B&N. Is anyone jumping in their ass because "The potential for abuse seems limitless?"
Because B&N doesn't own *.com, jackass.
Really, dude, if you're going to comment, at least have half a fucking clue how whatever it is you're commenting on [wikipedia.org] works.
Sheesh.
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What's the difference between B&N owning *.book.com and *.book, besides stripping off the now meaningless .com?
It's not meaningless. Read up on DNS.
*.book.com == a subdomain.
book.com == a domain.
*.book == a top level domain.
These are all different things, and the difference is both notable and important.
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Yeah... but .com is only valuable because only a few of those top level domains exist. It's essentially the same thing, and GP's point is perfectly valid. Don't go throwing stones in glass houses... or something like that.
Re:What's the difference? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah... but .com is only valuable because only a few of those top level domains exist. It's essentially the same thing, and GP's point is perfectly valid.
No, it's not. ".com" is a company. The idea of the more descriptive TLDs, like eg ".museum". is that it implies that what you find at that site is a legitimate member of that group. So Smithsonian.museum will take you to the actual Smithsonian Institute. If Amazon owned ".book" they would work to make it imply that "Book_title.book" was the legitimate site for any book to have. Every other publisher and/or author would end up having to either pay Amazon to get this, or have Amazon links all over it. Or more likely, both. Amazon would effectively have a tax on every book published.
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Was that the intention then? People would drop upwards a million dollars on these things, through some altruistic motive to be more descriptive of the contents?
I just assumed it would work the same way it always has. Companies would by up the same kind of names they did before, simply making the .com redundant. I'm pretty sure that's what ICANN indented as well, as the entire scheme appears to be designed for this purpose.
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Was that the intention then? People would drop upwards a million dollars on these things, through some altruistic motive to be more descriptive of the contents?
Altruism has nothing to do with this. Nothing I said implied that.
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What was your point then?
Mine was that these new gTLD will be treated exactly like an expensive bracket of .com domains, and the .com domain will simply be made redundant. I am not saying that is how it SHOULD be, simply stating that is how ICANN designed the scam to work. Essentially they are cutting out the market for domain squatting, and taking all that money for themselves.
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Managing a tld is not the same as managing a domain name. It is more than just dropping the .com
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Alas, it appears I am the fool on this one.
Is applying for a new gTLD the same as buying a domain name? [icann.org]
No. Nowadays, organizations and individuals around the world can register second-level and, in some cases, third-level domain names. (In a URL such as maps.google.com, "google" is a second-level name and "maps" is a third-level domain.) They simply need to find an accredited registrar, comply with the registrant terms and conditions and pay registration and renewal fees. The application for a new gTLD i
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I know what the fuck TLDs are, cocksucker.
Sure you do. That's why everyone else who knows what a TLD is shake their heads and chuckle softly when they read your posts.
Such a sad, angry, ill-informed little creature you are.
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I think the issue is that the price is high enough to be a barrier to poor domain squatters but not rich ones.
New TLDs are a bad idea to begin with (Score:4, Insightful)
Why are we considering new TLDs to begin with? We're taking a good, loose system of categorisation and throwing it away because... why exactly?
Re:New TLDs are a bad idea to begin with (Score:5, Informative)
Because ICANN wants a few extra dollars, regardless of the disastrous effects it presents.
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Money.
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Why are we considering new TLDs to begin with? We're taking a good, loose system of categorisation and throwing it away because... why exactly?
Because it didn't work. How many websites do you know of that have the .org or .net domains that actually belong there?
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Money.
Again, money.
How to undo? (Score:1)
I wonder what it would take to stop the release of new gTLDs at this late stage?
The gTLDs are plain daylight robbery of our common words and introduction of extremely unfair monopolies.
I suppose EU could ban the gTLDs but it doesn't seem to be of any concern yet. [europa.eu]
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Perhaps if enough big players configure their nameservers not to resolve any domain names from the new TLDs....
People are just fickle and amazon is big. (Score:1)
Everyone loves companies when they are the under dog, when they pop up and offer better services and prices than bigger companies and so on. But once a company like that gets big for making customers happy they eventually start being hated and overly scrutinized just because they are now a big company, even if they still do the same things for customers that made them be praised to begin with.
Like walmart for instance. When walmart started everyone loved them for offering so many products for low prices in
Oh, come on. (Score:1)
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I haven't typed WWW since the mid 00's. Get with the times.
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Then your browser is saving you as I come across sites all the time that require www.
HTML ain't XML (Score:2, Informative)
Okay, how about HTML, then which isn't based on XML bloat (HTML is based on SGML, and predates XML, although an XML serialization of the same content -- XHTML -- was introduced later, sold as a "better" successor to plain-old HTML, but with HTML5 pretty much got relegated to an parallel alternative serialization format rather than an replacement.)
ICANN needs to roll this back (Score:2)
ICANN simply needs to rollback this new TLD system and refund the money. It doesn't work.
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What do you mean it doesn't work? Clearly it works, they're getting paid! Its working exactly as it was expected to.
Oh, you mean it doesn't work for everyone else? Why does ICANN care? They got paid.
Don't worry it will fail (Score:1)
people are already used to just googling for stuff. Only noobs and idiots type the name of the item they're looking for into the URL textbox.
When you're looking for East of Eden by Steinbeck, do you type "eastofeden.com" in the URL? No, right?
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obvious (Score:3)
They are right and this is so obvious that anyone who disagrees should be shot as an act of mercy.
Then again, the DNS was basically fucked when they handed it to ICANN. Some things should not be run according to market dynamics.
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Wrong. ICANN itself is a monopoly, but it caters to commercial demands. It wouldn't have to, the answer to why it does probably starts with co- and doesn't end with -operation.
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In the same spirit, The Weather Channel is trying to grab .weather...
http://www.101domain.com/applications/1-1977-49078.htm
Organisations are expected to send letters if they are opposed to the TLD claim. This has the look of a big mess in the making.
privatize IPs (Score:1)
Not to defend ICANN in this, but... (Score:1)
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Agree. It is a freaking mess.