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Internet country-code top level domain for Colombia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
.co is the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) assigned to Colombia.
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2017) |
Introduced | December 24, 1991 |
---|---|
TLD type | Country code top-level domain |
Status | Active |
Registry | .CO Internet S.A.S. |
Sponsor | .CO Internet S.A.S. |
Intended use | Second-level domains (widgets.co) and country-code second-level domain names (ccSLDs) are intended for global use:
|
Actual use | Also widely used in Colombia. Sometimes used in typosquatting due to misspellings of .com domains |
Registered domains | 2,018,450 (2016)[2] |
Registration restrictions | None |
Structure | Top-level registration now permitted.[3] |
Documents | Launch and Registration Rules (in English) Registration policies |
Dispute policies | UDRP |
DNSSEC | yes |
Registry website | www www |
It is administered by .CO Internet S.A.S.,[4] a subsidiary of Neustar since 2014. As of July 10, 2010[update], there were no registration restrictions on second-level .co domains; any individual or entity in the world can register a .co domain.
.CO Internet S.A.S. from Bogotá, Colombia, was appointed as the manager for the .co TLD through a public procurement process that took place in early 2009. .CO Internet received the re-delegation approval as the manager of the .co TLD by ICANN on December 9, 2009, and received formal confirmation of the request by the United States Department of Commerce on December 23, 2009.[citation needed]
Google treats .co as a generic top-level domain (gTLD) because "users and website owners frequently see [the domain] as being more generic than country-targeted".[5]
When they took over administration of the .CO domain, .CO Internet S.A.S. implemented new domain policies that were more flexible than the historic ones that had been administered by the University of the Andes. The new policies were adjusted to international best practices and defined in consultation with local and international communities. With the new policies, Colombia would be able to sell second-level domain names to the world, such as widgets.co, where previously only third-level domain-names were available, such as widgets.com.co.
Notable single letter .CO domain names that have been allocated include:
[a.co] | Amazon |
[b.co] | Bestseller.com |
[g.co] | |
[m.co] | Volvo Car Mobility |
[o.co] | Overstock.com |
[s.co] | Snapchat |
[t.co] | X (formerly Twitter) |
[y.co] | Y.CO - The Yacht Company |
On September 15, 2010, .CO Internet S.A.S. had taken registrations for over 500,000 .CO domain names.[6] As of June 2011[update], more than 1 million .CO domains had been registered by people in over 200 countries and territories worldwide.[7][failed verification] As of January 2014, that number has grown to over 1.6 million .CO domains registered.[citation needed] As of December 2018, there were 2.2 million.[8]
With respect to search engine optimization, Google confirmed that "it will rank .co domains appropriately if the content is globally targeted".[9]
.CO domains became available via the following timeline:
The third-level domain registrations closely mirror the "traditional" IANA .com/.net/.org/.gov/.edu/.mil-hierarchy, with the addition of a national equivalent of .name. Different from registrations directly under .co, which are used to signal globally-relevant interests, third-level domains are used to signal locally-relevant business, organizations, academic institutions, and government.[citation needed]
IANA delegates ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 codes as country code top-level domains, and on December 24, 1991, the .co top-level domain was assigned to Colombia and delegated to the Universidad de los Andes.[11]
In 2001, the university began to consider the possibility of marketing the domain as an alternative to the generic top-level domains. The government of Colombia objected on the basis that the university, a private entity, did not have regulatory oversight of the TLD and the Minister of Communications, Angela Montoya Holguín, wrote to them requesting that they not continue. In turn the university wrote to ICANN, rejecting the government's objections and stating their intention to appoint a subcontractor to handle the commercialization of the domain.[11]
At a meeting on December 11, 2001, Holguín asked the Consultative Chamber and Civil Service of the Council of State to consider three issues:[12]
In relation to these three issues, the meeting concluded that:[12]
In response to the Council of State meeting, the university wrote to ICANN on 12 February 2002 stating that it had abandoned plans to commercialize the domain, and that as it could "no longer bear the administrative and operational responsibilities" it wished to discontinue its responsibility for operating the domain.[11]
Finally, with the enactment of Law 1065 of 2006, the Ministry of Communications of Colombia initiated a public consultation process involving local and international participants, including members of the ICANN community, with the objective of defining the future of the .CO TLD. As a result of that process, through Resolution 001652 of 2008, the Ministry approved new policies that would govern the administration of the .CO TLD.[13] A public procurement process began which resulted in the award of the administration contract to .CO Internet SAS. Finally, on February 7, 2010, the administration of the TLD was transitioned from the University of Andes to .CO Internet SAS, under the regulatory and policy supervision of the Ministry of Communications of Colombia.[14][15]
On July 20, 2010, second level .co domains became available to the rest of the world on a first-come, first-served basis. In 2014, .CO Internet S.A.S was acquired by Neustar for US$109 Million, and became a wholly owned subsidiary of Neustar.[16] It is responsible for the promotion, administration, and technical operation of the .co TLD.[6]
Only accredited registrars are able to sell .co domain names directly; other registrars selling .co domain names are acting as resellers. The list of accredited registrars is available on the .CO Internet website,[17] and as of October 2011 there are 20 accredited registrars. Some of the 20 registrars operate under multiple brands.[18]
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