Apparently, they’ve been available since 2014.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    DNS engineer here, got two corrections to make if you care:

    the owner of Twitter.com couldn’t really do shit about you owning it.

    That’s not entirely true. .sucks is walking an extremely fine line and if they ever grow big enough and piss off enough companies, they will be shut down. Larry Strickling, head of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration has spoken on multiple occasions about his concerns about gTLD (what people are calling “novelty” TLD’s) abuse to redirect users incorrectly (either for parody or for malicious purpose) Source. ICANN absolutely will crack down if they think a gTLD is acting rogue as they would be afraid of the NTIA cracking down on them. Passing the gTLD rules was already very contentious for many reasons. Defensive domain list expansion being one of the biggest.

    There’s the other obvious issue that if you’re making a site like “twitter.sucks” you will have to be very careful not to infringe on their copy rights for things like their logo, etc. Especially if the basis of the site is to mock the .com version of the same.

    Surprisingly, no. Copyright infringement doesn’t apply to parody. Unless twitter.sucks is a fully functional site that draws in revenue (and not just from the humor, but from actually having a directly competing product), then it’s mostly safe from a copyright claim.

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      You make excellent points, I will defer to your knowledge for all the things you’ve mentioned.

      Thanks for the reply. I work in IT and do a blend of system administration and networking, and I appreciate DNS intensely.

      Thanks for all you do