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From Cibernética Americana
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<span style="background-color:yellow;color:red;font-size:14px;"><b>Here is the big and simple Truth you must first understand about internet domain names &mdash;</b></span>
<span style="height=:30px;background-color:yellow;color:red;font-size:14px;"><b>Here is the big and simple Truth you must first understand about internet domain names &mdash;</b></span>
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Registries and Registrars don't own names, they just provide services to the actual owners who are the entities that create them, in the priced name system with a suffix for which there are authoritative registries. Once you own a name it can never be taken from you as long as you are routing it. The public system is constructed to prevent that, as a vital principle. Suffixes are no exception, nobody really owns them although one or another registry may be the responsible top level router at a given time. The suffixes were originally considered to be public, i.e. socially owned domains or unowned generic types (.edu, .org, .com, etc.).
Registries and Registrars don't own names, they just provide services to the actual owners who are the entities that create them, in the priced name system with a suffix for which there are authoritative registries. Once you own a name it can never be taken from you as long as you are routing it. The public system is constructed to prevent that, as a vital principle. Suffixes are no exception, nobody really owns them although one or another registry may be the responsible top level router at a given time. The suffixes were originally considered to be public, i.e. socially owned domains or unowned generic types (.edu, .org, .com, etc.).

Revision as of 05:43, 3 October 2023