TLD

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The Top Level Domain (TLD) is always the last part of a domain name, such as .com, .net, .us, etc.[1] Each TLD is managed by a single Registry.

History

The need for a hierarchical DNS arose with the popularity of the Internet in academic spheres in the early 1980s, which eventually necessitated a de-centralized Internet. Communications between The Stanford Research Institute NIC and other institutions included plans to create a hierarchical DNS, found in RFC 805, a group document from 1982. This document outlines many of the basics of the eventual DNS, including the need for TLDs to provide a fixed starting point for queries, and the need for SLDs to be unique. This, in turn, would necessitate the need for a registrar type of administration, and help the nascent IT community recognize that the distribution of responsibility for each domain to individual name servers would provide administrative advantages.[2]

Varieties of TLDs

There are different types of TLDs.

These TLDs operate in different manners, and can be categorized in some simple ways:

Innovations

At its Seoul conference in 2009, ICANN approved the IDN ccTLD fast track process, which made way for ccTLDs to be written in non-latin characters. Russia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, and United Arab Emirates are some of the first countries to advance in the application and implementation process.[3]

References

  1. TLD
  2. Living Internet
  3. Gather.com

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