I think those silly long TLDs aren't going to catch on anyway. I could be wrong of course, but at least for now I don't plan on spending a penny on them. Gimme the old-school 2 or 3 letter TLDs.

On 10/10/16 5:56 PM, Seth Mattinen wrote:
On 10/10/16 14:27, Chuck McCown wrote:
I am going to scoop up a few domain names and point them to my site.
Things like surgeprotectors.com are gone.  Someone is camping on them.

So, looking at variations like surge-protection
Adding a plural.  Not sure what non alphanumeric typographical
characters are allowed other than the hyphen.

Is there any prohibitions against using any TLD like .org?
Is a .org or .info equivalent to a .com when you are looking for stuff?

Lots of .co, .us and .biz out there. Should be equivalent but perhaps not?

Need opinions.


There's a metric ass ton of TLDs now so none of that matters anymore. Except like gov and edu.

You could probably even do surge.protection since that's a TLD now.

I have a customer that's a contractor that started using the "contractors" TLD instead of the traditional ones.

I registered roller.network a while back since minus the dot it's literally the company name. Haven't started using it because I'm not sure people are used to seeing TLDs like that yet.

~Seth


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