.com

The domain name com is a top-level domain (TLD) in the Domain Name System of the Internet. Added in 1985, its name is derived from the word commercial,[1] indicating its original intended purpose for domains registered by commercial organizations. Later, the domain opened for general purposes.

.com
IntroducedJanuary 1, 1985 (1985-01-01)
RegistryVerisign
SponsorNone
Intended useCommercial entities
Actual useUsed for general purposes and is widely regarded as the standard for TLDs
Registration restrictionsNone
StructureRegistrations are conducted at second level.
DocumentsRFC 920; RFC 1591; ICANN registry agreement
Dispute policiesUDRP
DNSSECYes
IDNYes
Registry websiteVerisign .com Registry

The domain was originally administered by the United States Department of Defense, but is today operated by Verisign, and remains under ultimate jurisdiction of U.S. law.[2][3][4] Verisign Registrations in the .com domain are processed via registrars accredited by ICANN. The registry accepts internationalized domain names.

The domain was one of the original top-level domains (TLDs) in the Internet when the Domain Name System was implemented in January 1985, the others being edu, gov, mil, net, org, and int.[5] It has grown into the largest top-level domain.[6]

History

The domain com was one of the first set of top-level domains when the Domain Name System was first implemented for use on the Internet on January 1, 1985.[7] The domain was administered by the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD), however the department contracted the domain maintenance to SRI International. SRI created DDN-NIC, also known as SRI-NIC, or simply the NIC (Network Information Center),[8] then accessible online with the domain name nic.ddn.mil. Beginning October 1, 1991, an operations contract was awarded to Government Systems Inc. (GSI), which sub-contracted it to Network Solutions Inc. (NSI).[9]

On January 1, 1993, the National Science Foundation assumed responsibility of maintenance, as com was primarily being used for non-defense interests. The NSF contracted operation to Network Solutions (NSI). In 1995, the NSF authorized NSI to begin charging registrants an annual fee, for the first-time since the domain's inception. Initially the fee was US$50 per year, with US$35 going to NSI, and US$15 going to a government fund. New registrations had to pay for the first two years, making the new-domain registration fee US$100. In 1997 the United States Department of Commerce assumed authority over all generic TLDs. It is currently operated by VeriSign, which had acquired Network Solutions. VeriSign later spun off Network Solutions' non-registry functions into a separate company which continues as a registrar. In the English language the domain is often spelled with a leading period and commonly pronounced as dot-com, and has entered common parlance this way.

Although com domains were originally intended to designate commercial entities,[10] the domain has had no restrictions for eligible registrants since the mid-1990s. With the commercialization and popularization of the Internet, the domain was opened to the public and quickly became the most common top-level domain for websites, email, and networking. Many companies that flourished in the period from 1997 to 2001—the time known as the "dot-com bubble"—incorporated the label com into company names; these became known as dot-coms or dot-com companies. The introduction of biz in 2001, which is restricted to businesses, has had no impact on the popularity of com.

Although companies anywhere in the world can register com domains, many countries have a second-level domain with a similar purpose under their own country code top-level domain (ccTLD), such as Australia (com.au), China (com.cn), Germany (com.de), Greece (com.gr), India (co.in), Indonesia (co.id), Japan (co.jp), Mexico (com.mx), Nepal (.com.np), Pakistan (com.pk), South Korea (co.kr), Sri Lanka (com.lk), United Kingdom (co.uk), and Vietnam (.com.vn).

Many non-commercial sites and networks use com names to benefit from the perceived recognizability of a com domain. However, the registration statistics show varying popularity over the years.[6]

In December 2011, VeriSign reported that approximately 100 million com domains were registered.[11] As of March 2009, VeriSign reported that the domain is served by 926 accredited registrars.[11]

On November 29, 2012, the U.S. Department of Commerce approved renewal of the com Registry Agreement between Verisign, Inc., and ICANN. Through this agreement, Verisign managed the com registry until November 30, 2018.[12]

List of oldest .com domains

The following are the 100 oldest still-existing registered com domains.[13]

RankCreation dateDomain name
1March 15, 1985symbolics.com
2April 24, 1985BBN.com
3May 24, 1985think.com
4July 11, 1985MCC.com
5September 30, 1985DEC.com
6November 7, 1985northrop.com
7January 9, 1986xerox.com
8January 17, 1986SRI.com
9March 3, 1986HP.com
10March 5, 1986bellcore.com
11March 19, 1986IBM.com
11March 19, 1986sun.com
13March 25, 1986intel.com
13March 25, 1986TI.com
15April 25, 1986ATT.com
16May 8, 1986GMR.com
16May 8, 1986tek.com
18July 10, 1986FMC.com
18July 10, 1986UB.com
20August 5, 1986bell-atl.com
20August 5, 1986GE.com
20August 5, 1986grebyn.com
20August 5, 1986ISC.com
20August 5, 1986NSC.com
20August 5, 1986stargate.com
26September 2, 1986boeing.com
27September 18, 1986ITCorp.com
28September 29, 1986siemens.com
29October 18, 1986pyramid.com
30October 27, 1986alphaDC.com
30October 27, 1986BDM.com
30October 27, 1986fluke.com
30October 27, 1986inmet.com
30October 27, 1986kesmai.com
30October 27, 1986mentor.com
30October 27, 1986NEC.com
30October 27, 1986ray.com
30October 27, 1986rosemount.com
30October 27, 1986vortex.com
40November 5, 1986alcoa.com
40November 5, 1986GTE.com
42November 17, 1986adobe.com
42November 17, 1986AMD.com
42November 17, 1986DAS.com
42November 17, 1986data-IO.com
42November 17, 1986octopus.com
42November 17, 1986portal.com
42November 17, 1986teltone.com
49December 11, 19863Com.com
49December 11, 1986amdahl.com
RankCreate dateDomain name
49December 11, 1986CCUR.com
49December 11, 1986CI.com
49December 11, 1986convergent.com
49December 11, 1986DG.com
49December 11, 1986peregrine.com
49December 11, 1986quad.com
49December 11, 1986SQ.com
49December 11, 1986tandy.com
49December 11, 1986TTI.com
49December 11, 1986unisys.com
61January 19, 1987CGI.com
61January 19, 1987CTS.com
61January 19, 1987SPDCC.com
64February 19, 1987apple.com
65March 4, 1987NMA.com
65March 4, 1987prime.com
67April 4, 1987philips.com
68April 23, 1987datacube.com
68April 23, 1987KAI.com
68April 23, 1987TIC.com
68April 23, 1987vine.com
72April 30, 1987NCR.com
73May 14, 1987cisco.com
73May 14, 1987RDL.com
75May 20, 1987SLB.com
76May 27, 1987parcplace.com
76May 27, 1987UTC.com
78June 26, 1987IDE.com
79July 9, 1987TRW.com
80July 13, 1987unipress.com
81July 27, 1987dupont.com
81July 27, 1987lockheed.com
83July 28, 1987rosetta.com
84August 18, 1987toad.com
85August 31, 1987quick.com
86September 3, 1987allied.com
86September 3, 1987DSC.com
86September 3, 1987SCO.com
89September 22, 1987gene.com
89September 22, 1987KCCS.com
89September 22, 1987spectra.com
89September 22, 1987WLK.com
93September 30, 1987mentat.com
94October 14, 1987WYSE.com
95November 2, 1987CFG.com
96November 9, 1987marble.com
97November 16, 1987cayman.com
97November 16, 1987entity.com
99November 24, 1987KSR.com
100November 30, 1987NYNEXST.com

See also

  • List of most expensive domain names

References

  1. "RFC 920: Domain Requirements". October 1984. p. 2. COM = Commercial, any commercial related domains meeting the second level requirements.
  2. "US shuts down Canadian gambling site". The Register. Retrieved 28 November 2012.
  3. "Les ".com" peuvent être saisis par les autorités américaines". PC World magazine. Archived from the original on 2013-02-27. Retrieved 28 November 2012.
  4. "No need for SOPA, VeriSign seizes bodog.com for US authorities". TECHSPOT.
  5. "ICANN | Archives | Top-Level Domains (gTLDs)".
  6. "The Domain Industry Brief".
  7. "IANA — .com Domain Delegation Data". www.iana.org. Retrieved 2020-02-01.
  8. Sitzler, Dana D.; Smith, Patricia G.; Marine, April N. (February 1992). "Building a Network Information Services Infrastructure". p. 3. Retrieved 2008-11-16.
  9. Richard Schmalgemeier (1991-09-25). "SRI-NIC services moving". Archived from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2008-11-16.
  10. Jon Postel (March 1994). "RFC 1591 Domain Name System Structure and Delegation". p. 2. Archived from the original on 2 December 2008. Retrieved 2008-11-16.
  11. .com Monthly Transaction Report of December 2011
  12. Department of Commerce Approves Verisign-ICANN .com Registry Renewal Agreement | NTIA
  13. "100 oldest .com domains". iWhois.com. Archived from the original on 2013-10-14. Retrieved 2012-03-10.
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