That‘s the great idea behind Freename: your city name (and all other examples) can be used not only once, because everyone can buy a SLD under the registered TLD. This is not always the case. If the registrant of the TLD decides not to allow other customers to register SLDs, then he alone can do it...
Expert wrote:Are you living in a city? Your city name can be used only once!
That‘s the great idea behind Freename: your city name (and all other examples) can be used not only once, because everyone can buy a SLD under the registered TLD.
Great list! I have ideas for a few more options: Are you living in a city? Your city name can be used only once! Are you living in a country? Your country name can be used only once! Are you an artist? Your artist name can be used only once! Is your business dedicated to a technology or product? … H...
Quite often there is an alternative spelling that can be registered instead, for example: Inserting hyphens or emojis Alternative spellings Addition of words
But it's true: it would be annoying not to have the best spelling of a domain name in your possession.
Make sure you'll get your Freename TLD before someone else has registered it! ⋅ Are you an individual? Your last name can only be registered as a TLD once! ⋅ Are you a company owner? Your company name can only be registered ...
... with the top-level-domain after the dot like http://service.chat, http://pay.express or http://cash.delivery. It is very important that the words before AND after the dot match well to each other. Then even not well-known extensions could sell for high prices, because internet users know already ...
... where they are. Mainly those who have heard about this topic, but are still web2 dominant with some web3 curiosity. I didn't consider Telegram before due to the spammy risks + having to monitor conversations (like this forum); but you likely are right about its ability to get faster access ...
... senior VP of business development at Unstoppable Domains. Matthew Gould is the founder and CEO of Unstoppable Domains. I didn't notice that before. I thought they were just two famous business people. But as you mention, they are directly related to Web3.
... any likely candidates to become the preferred search engine (like Google is now in web2) for the web3 world? I ask because in the late-1990's, before Google really even was being used, the competition for search engine traffic had platforms like Yahoo, MSN (later on Bing), Ask Jeeves, AOL's ...
... any likely candidates to become the preferred search engine (like Google is now in web2) for the web3 world? I ask because in the late-1990's, before Google really even was being used, the competition for search engine traffic had platforms like Yahoo, MSN (later on Bing), Ask Jeeves, AOL's ...