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An Open Letter to ICANN on the TLD.js Movement

12 pointsby dscapealmost 13 years ago

6 comments

RossMalmost 13 years ago
What on earth is the purpose of a .js TLD? Is it so you can link to <a href="http://jquery.js" rel="nofollow">http://jquery.js</a> instead? Seems like a minor convenience.
alexpennyalmost 13 years ago
Can I vote to not have a .js TLD. It's pointless turning file extensions into TLD's.
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frou_dhalmost 13 years ago
What's next? Are digital artists going to demand ".png" because they feel a tremendous kinship with the alpha-channel?
koidealmost 13 years ago
Two things:<p>1.- What do you want the .js TLD for?<p>2.- Do you really think a letter of this type will convince anybody? Reads too much like "we want this because we want this and thus we deserve it"<p>If you get it, good for you, I wouldn't actually mind, but I fail to see the importance or the actual need.
pacmonalmost 13 years ago
While in theory I don't mind the idea of a .js TLD... This is a can of worms. Just think about all the other programming languages out there and how many other hackers for those would want their own TLD. Then let's expand that out for basically anything else. The question becomes - where do we stop?
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h84ru3aalmost 13 years ago
If this is a hobbyist thing, as the letter says, then why not act like hobbyists? ICANN is primarily focused on domain names for profit. It's a business.<p>Here's how to set up your hobbyist .js TLD. First, run your own mirror copy of the internic root and add an entry for your authoritative .js server. Second, run a recursive server and prime it with your enhanced copy of the internic root. Finally, tell .js fans the IP of your recursive server. Voila, a new TLD for anyone that wants to use it. .js fans that want to use the TLD simply need to change their DNS settings to use your recursive server. The .js fans still get all the same TLD's everyone accepts as "ICANN-approved", plus they get the .js TLD. For those who don't want anything to do with this TLD (and prefer to endorse the ICANN protection racket approach to new gTLD's), this affects nothing. Unless they change their own DNS settings to use your recursive server, they will never see the .js domain. All clean. Zero pollution.