Kwa maudhui

(.eo) Domain Name for Esperantists

ya Josh, 6 Mei 2007

Ujumbe: 24

Lugha: English

Josh (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 6 Mei 2007 2:45:43 asubuhi

http://www.icann.org/comments-mail/01feb99-28feb99...

That's the only thing I can find on record of someone applying for the .eo domain... but that was back in 1999 I believe.

I think it would be great if Esperanto had its own tld. For example: www.google.eo or something.

The other thing that could go with it is that the domains would be free for people to register, but applicants must apply in Esperanto. That would make another benefit for learning the language.

I was wondering how we could go about getting a petition or something around to submit to icann.org on getting this started.

-Josh

RiotNrrd (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 6 Mei 2007 5:35:11 asubuhi

Josh:The other thing that could go with it is that the domains would be free for people to register, but applicants must apply in Esperanto.
That would never fly. They would definitely want payment.

But a TLD would be nice. Although then the lojban people would want one too. And the Klingon-speakers. And so on.

Not that I have any problem with them getting TLD's either. Just seems unlikely, somehow.

wein100 (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 6 Mei 2007 1:33:19 alasiri

That link doesn't work unfortunatly. ploro.gif

But the idea is really nice. I mean, there are places with their own tld and yet less people than there are Esperantists. For example the Falkland Islands, Jan Mayen, South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, Bouvet Island, ...

Josh (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 6 Mei 2007 1:44:54 alasiri

RiotNrrd:
Josh:The other thing that could go with it is that the domains would be free for people to register, but applicants must apply in Esperanto.
That would never fly. They would definitely want payment.

But a TLD would be nice. Although then the lojban people would want one too. And the Klingon-speakers. And so on.

Not that I have any problem with them getting TLD's either. Just seems unlikely, somehow.
How does .TK people not have to let people pay? Yeah they do ads, but still...

Kwekubo (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 6 Mei 2007 2:48:44 alasiri

Google cache of the page linked above: here

This is an interesting idea. There has been a move recently to grant domains to linguistic and cultural groups, instead of just countries. For example, the .cat domain was approved in 2005 for "the Catalan linguistic and cultural community on the Internet" and it's fully independently of countries in which Catalan is spoken. There are campaigns now to get .gal for Galician, .cym for Welsh, .bzh for Breton and others along the same lines. Perhaps .eo (or .epo if a three-letter domain is more appropriate) should be considered too.

Josh (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 6 Mei 2007 3:10:46 alasiri

Yeah, I prefer .eo over .epo, though... Just has a better sound to it.

Here is a list of what I guess would sound alright:

.eo
.esp =P
.int (international language perhaps?)

EL_NEBULOSO (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Mei 2007 7:24:45 asubuhi

Hi,

a domain name for Esperanto is a good idea. I guess .eo would be the best version, epo rather reminds people on doping (cyclists...).

Anyway, don't know whether a petition would help or whether someone here from the forum who is experienced with the setup of domains/web sites might just go forward and inquire what would be needed to succeed with your idea.

Geraldo

Talisman (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 15 Novemba 2015 7:18:53 alasiri

This thread is almost 10 years old.

Now the DNS or Nameservers are radically different.

I think a new push for a .eo could work. given the plethora of new extensions that are out there nowadays.

godady says its 1208 different extentions.

although i could not find the different landoj on godaddy.

nornen (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 15 Novemba 2015 7:26:09 alasiri

Talisman:This thread is almost 10 years old.

Now the DNS or Nameservers are radically different.

I think a new push for a .eo could work. given the plethora of new extensions that are out there nowadays.

godady says its about 350 different extentions.

although i could not find the different landoj on godaddy.
Nothing much has changed. "epo" surely is possible, "eo" surely not.

Talisman (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 15 Novemba 2015 7:43:19 alasiri

nornen:
Talisman:This thread is almost 10 years old.
Now the DNS or Nameservers are radically different.

I think a new push for a .eo could work. given the plethora of new extensions that are out there nowadays.

godady says its about 350 different extentions.

although i could not find the different landoj on godaddy.
Nothing much has changed. "epo" surely is possible, "eo" surely not.
I don't understand, can you please expound on why .eo is "surely not" available.
please take a look at the "brand spanking new" choices godaddy has
https://www.godaddy.com/tlds/gtld.aspx

.xyz is a cool one and even though it is not eo specific, it could be co-opted I don't like .epo and for icann to add .epo is the same as adding .eo
(the really Hot new extention is .io)

Correction: godaddy has 1208 different extensions. .eo is Possible politically and technically (unless thier already is a .eo extention for some country) and it seems it's only a question of MONEY. which is probably greatly reduced from what it was

https://www.icann.org/search/#!/?searchText=esperanto

Gentlemen & Ladies:
I propose that the rapidly-growing worldwide community of those who use
Esperanto on the internet be granted the domain extension [.eo] even
though there is no ISO recognised country of "Esperantoland". If Tonga
[.to] and Nauru [.nu] deserve domain hierarchies despite extremely small
populations, I think it not unreasonable to grant similar status to the
much larger community of Esperantists.
Thank you for your consideration!
Miko Sloper
Director, Esperanto League for North America

Kurudi juu