Why should .co.uk holders get first refusal?
I have some good org.uk''s but there would be no argument whatsoever for the org.uk owner being anywhere in the pecking order. Org.uk is sold for non profit and the new.uk would be for business.
Answer in bold by websaway!
There are many legit businesses using .org.uk.
Incidentally, there are, by definition, NO legitimate businesses on .me.uk because the following T&C apply: "The .me.uk SLD is intended to provide a personal namespace within the .uk Top Level Domain. Unless Rules 9.4 or 9.5 apply, registrants of .me.uk domain names must be, and remain at all times, natural persons (a “qualifying person"), and shall not be recorded on the register as being the agent, trustee, proxy or representative for any person or entity (whether having an individual legal personality or not) which is not a qualifying person."
If you ARE running a business on .me.uk it just means that Nominet hasn't noticed yet, but you're still breaking their T&C. And unlike .org.uk there's no "We'll look the other way" clause either.
The .me.uk domain names are intended for personal registrations, however we do appreciate that the ubu.me.uk domain name is registered to a UK Limited Company.
In accordance to the domain name rules
http://www.nominet.org.uk/registrants/aboutdomainnames/rules/ section 9.5, the domain name ubu.me.uk was registered on 05 July 2004 and can remain registered to the limited company until it is transferred to another party or cancelled.
London.co.uk is pointed at sedo,so not in use,
London.co.uk is pointed at sedo,so not in use, I fancy mr Johnson among others would be eyeing that one.
It could be argued that anyone parking domain names IS classed as a business as they have financial gains from parking the names and therefore it is their business model - a few years back this was how the majority of domainers made a living until the revenue dried up.
It could be argued that anyone parking domain names IS classed as a business as they have financial gains from parking the names and therefore it is their business model - a few years back this was how the majority of domainers made a living until the revenue dried up.
In general when to businesses (not retail) in the UK close for Christmas break and then re-open?
If "in use" is defined as valid name servers held at ns1.nic.uk and an A record existing for any of:
(a) www.*.{co|org|me|ltd|plc}.uk
(b) @.*.{co|org|me|ltd|plc}.uk
resolving to a web server on port 80 and/or
(c) an MX record for @.*.{co|org|me|ltd|plc}.uk resolving to an IP address
where * is a third level domain name it will ignore that it is perfectly legitimate to have an A record of {something-obscure}.*.{co|org|me|ltd|plc}.uk resolving somewhere, whether to a web page on port 80 or something else on any other port. Moreover {something-obscure} will only feature in a zone file held by the name servers hosting the domain name, and would not appear in name servers maintained by Nominet, and so could only be known to visitors who had been made aware of its existence if it had not been published. There is no requirement to resolve either (a) or (b) to port 80 of a web server or to have (c) exist for a domain name to be "in use" for other activities. Therefore anyone operating a domain name that has had functioning name servers at ns1.nic.uk may be able to legitimately demonstrate that an A record {something-obscure}.{their-domain-name}.{co|org|me|ltd|plc}.uk has resolved somewhere without it being possible to disprove their claim.
Have I composed this coherently enough for it to make sense to the majority?I realise not everyone may be familiar with DNS and zone files.
Unfortunately I am not aware of a more simple way of explaining it without negating important facts. Could you improve on it for the likes of Joe Bloggs?
Unfortunately I am not aware of a more simple way of explaining it without negating important facts. Could you improve on it for the likes of Joe Bloggs?
The phishers are going to love this.
barclaysco.uk
Doesn't look right to me, but the average joe is going to be confused.
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