• doc
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    415 months ago

    Yep. This is such a weird fear monger topic.

    If the country that owns IO ceases to exist then IANA will just make it an ICANN generic TLD. Such a widely used TLD won’t be allowed to disappear. The rules are all made up anyway.

    • @dan@upvote.au
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      5 months ago

      Two letter TLDs are reserved for countries. No gTLDs use a two letter TLD.

      I guess in theory you could make a new country called “Input Output”, get ISO3166 to be updated to specify “IO” as your country’s two letter abbreviation, then request the IO TLD from IANA.

      • doc
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        25 months ago

        Two letter TLDs are reserved for countries. No gTLDs use a two letter TLD.

        According to the rules set by the org that controls the fate of IO. They can easily change the rules if they wanted. There is a vested interest in not losing IO, and nothing but their own rule to stop them. Who’s to tell them they can’t do whatever they want in this matter?

        • @dan@upvote.au
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          5 months ago

          They could change the rules, but it took them many, many years to get to finalize the rules they’ve got today. IANA isn’t exactly a fast-moving organization.

      • @EndlessNightmare@reddthat.com
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        15 months ago

        Maybe they could make .io into a 3-character gTLD by adding a character to it. Moving all of the websites (except those actually relevant to the territory) over to a new gTLD in unison seems like it would reduce confusion for the people who use those sites. Knowing that acme.io is now acme.iox (or w/e) would make it easier on everyone.