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How many TLDs safely fit in the DNS?
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Just Google 'tld "scarce resource"' for a long list.
All of the hits I looked at make a distinction in one form or another between "good" and "not-so-good", indicating "good" names are scarce. This seems obvious to me.
You seem to be attempting to assert that all TLD strings, regardless of length or string content, have equal value and thus, there should be no policies regarding the allocation of those strings. This seems silly to me. People want "good" strings (which are limited) and don't want "not-so-good" strings (which are near infinite). Ignoring this is a waste of time.
It's been proposed before.
The fact that someone has proposed a TLD made of a large number of random characters doesn't mean anyone would actually be interested in registering in it. If this was desirable, it could be implemented in an existing TLD, yet it isn't.
Unfortunately, what most people forget is that what looks like random characters in English could hold perfectly valid meaning in another language or character set.
Then the string isn't actually random.
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Re:It's even bigger...
by dc396
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