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From Cibernética Americana
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<div style="height:50px;background-color:yellow;color:red;font-size:14px;"><br> <b> Here is the big and simple Truth you must first understand about internet domain names — </b> </div> | <div style="height:50px;background-color:yellow;color:red;font-size:14px;"><br> <b> Here is the big and simple Truth you must first understand about internet domain names — </b> </div> | ||
<blockquote style="font-size:20px;text-align:justify;"> | <blockquote style="font-size:20px;text-align:justify;"> | ||
Registries and Registrars don't own names, they just provide services to the natural owners, those 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, albeit with a fee to a registrar in the public system which 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 | Registries and Registrars don't own names, they just provide services to the natural owners, those 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, albeit with a fee to a registrar in the public system which 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 authoritative top level name controller at a given time. The suffixes were originally considered to be public, i.e. socially owned domains or unowned generic types (.com, .edu, .gov, .org, etc.). | ||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||