Aleks Husonwrote wrote: > I'm writing to ask for opinions on the Connect .net.au policy in regards to > their restriction on two letter domains. In his reply, David Goldstein remarked: > What the rules are for .com etc I'm not sure. With respect to refusing 2-letter names, the same. The policy states: "3.3 Composition of a Domain Name A com.au domain name must: * Be at least two characters long * Contain only letters (a-z), numbers (0-9)and hyphens or a combination of these * Start and end with an alphanumeric character, not a hyphen." The rules were set by Robert Elz (who manages the .org.au space) so it's certain to apply to that second-level domain space as well. You might be interested to know that the 2-letter top-level domain RA.COM recently went for only $36,740 USD through Afternic. Another 2-letter is on sale now. That's CU.COM. It could perhaps be snapped up by Commercial Union? You'll remember that NetRegistry got au.com and started competing with com.au. I suppose that's the fear here. But I can't see somebody wanting another country code like "uk" or "nz" to give them a domain like: manchesterunited.uk.net.au or kiwifruitgrowers.nz.com.au But you'll note that words like "com" and "net" are prohibted too. So you can't have: brokenhill.com.net.au or brokenhill.net.com.au Whilst I agree that approach would be pretty confusing, the ban doesn't need to be extended to ALL possible 2-letter domain names. I don't see why General Electric, for example, shouldn't have: ge.com.au and/or ge.net.au Quite normal and very powerful, I would have thought. Regards Patrick Corliss patrick§quad.net.auReceived on Thu Sep 28 2000 - 23:16:27 UTC
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