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.sexy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Internet top-level domain
.sexy
Introduced2013
TLD typeGeneric top-level domain
StatusActive
RegistryUniregistry
Intended useAdult entertainment
Registered domains10,203 (September 2023)[1]
DNSSECYes
IDNYes

.sexy is ageneric top-level domain owned byUniregistry. Delegated on 14 November 2013, .sexy was the subject of controversy due to opposition from the government ofSaudi Arabia and privacy concerns regarding registering domains.

History

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.sexy, along with.tattoo, was one of the first two gTLDs launched byUniregistry on 14 November 2013.[2] Itssunrise period, during which pre-existing trademark holders may register URLs prior to general availability to prevent domain squatting, lasted from 11 December 2013 to 9 February 2014, and it entered general availability on 25 February 2014.[3] .sexy was one of the first hundred gTLDs to be delegated.[4] Prior to its release, .sexy was one of many announced gTLDs, variously reported as 31[5] and over 160,[6] that the Communication and Information Technology Commission of the government ofSaudi Arabia objected to; other TLDs found objectionable included.gay,.casino,.sucks,.wine, and.bible.[5][6]

On the first day of .sexy's general availability, around 2,000 domain names were registered, which commentators described as a "disappointing" low showing. The domain had a comparable number of first-day registrations as unpopular domains from Uniregistry's competitorDonuts such as.gallery and.estate.[7][8] .sexy's launch was hampered by a lack of support from and availability at major domain name registrars such asGoDaddy,[9] based in privacy concerns around Uniregistry's demands that registrants inform Uniregistry of their real names and identities to purchase domains.[10] A number of pre-orders of .sexy domains were also stymied by domain name collision, the phenomenon where a private (intranet)domain name system queries a public one,[11] and by names that had been pre-ordered being reserved by Uniregistry.[12]

In 2015, a survey byICANN concluded networks in Iran were systematically blocking .sexy domains.[13] In 2017, Uniregistry CEOFrank Schilling increased the price of .sexy and a number of other domains due to low uptake. Schilling stated that the costs of running a TLD demanded that low-use TLDs, such as .sexy, be sold at higher price points in order to turn a profit.[14]

Usage

[edit]

According to Schilling, .sexy domains are intended "for fun, for fashion, for recreation, as a novelty, [and] for risqué content".[15] .sexy has also been associated withcybersquatting, with cybersquatters purchasing .sexy domains for major companies who rejected having their trademarks associated with adult industries;[16] such misuse was predicted prior to the domain's release, with commentators describing them as potentially costing companies "serious money".[17] Explicit content is prohibited on the home pages of websites with .sexy domains, although sites are permitted to have a landing page with a warning button that needs to be clicked through to access such content.[18]

As of 2023[update], there are 10,203 registered .sexy domains, making up 0.03% of all domains.NameCheap holds the majority of the .sexy market share with 65.8%, although 14% of .sexy domains are registered by registries outside the top ten.[1] The domain's lack of popularity was described by domain expert Kevin Murphy as a failure of Schilling's own practices:

You can put pretty much any profession or product name in front of a.guru and it is meaningful as a brand or a rather grandiose self-appointed title. Not so with .sexy. Ironically, this appears to be [Schilling's] "Toilet Paper Test" in action. Schilling argues that the test of how generic, and by extension popular, a gTLD is should be whether toiletpaper.[tld] works. I think toiletpaper.guru works, but toiletpaper.sexy does not.

— Kevin Murphy, Domain Incite[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ab".sexy".nTLDStats. Retrieved21 September 2023.
  2. ^Murphy, Kevin (14 November 2013).".sexy and 10 more gTLDs now in the root".Domain Incite. Retrieved19 May 2021.
  3. ^"TLD Startup Information".ICANN. 2015. Retrieved20 May 2021.
  4. ^Pachal, Pete (23 January 2014)."First 100 Generic Internet Domains Include .Rich, .Sexy and .Ninja".Mashable. Retrieved20 May 2021.
  5. ^abBosch, Torie (16 August 2012)."Saudi Arabia Apparently Objects to .Catholic, .Gay, .Bible, and 28 More Proposed New Top-Level Domains".Slate. Retrieved19 May 2021.
  6. ^abSutton, Mark (17 August 2012)."Saudi Arabia objects to new internet domain names".Arabian Business. Retrieved19 May 2021.
  7. ^Allemann, Andrew (26 February 2014)."Frank Schilling's .Sexy close to 2,000 domains, .Tattoo 700".Domain Name Wire. Retrieved20 May 2021.
  8. ^abMurphy, Kevin (27 February 2014)."Disappointing .sexy launch shows the importance of the channel".Domain Incite. Retrieved20 May 2021.
  9. ^Allemann, Andrew (24 February 2014)."Frank Schilling's first two top level domain names available tomorrow".Domain Name Wire. Retrieved20 May 2021.
  10. ^Murphy, Kevin (25 February 2014)."Here's why registrars are boycotting .sexy".Domain Incite. Retrieved20 May 2021.
  11. ^"Name Collision Resources & Information".ICANN. 6 December 2013. Retrieved20 May 2021.
  12. ^Berkens, Michael (28 February 2014)."If You Pre-Ordered One Of These .Sexy Domains Don't Blame Uniregistry Blame Your Registrar".The Domains. Retrieved20 May 2021.
  13. ^Murphy, Kevin (16 September 2015).".sexy may be blocked in Iran".Domain Incite. Retrieved20 May 2021.
  14. ^Murphy, Kevin (7 March 2017)."Schilling: big price increases needed to keep new gTLDs alive".Domain Incite. Retrieved20 May 2021.
  15. ^".SEXY is too sexy for its shirt: A rapid-fire Q and A with Uniregistry CEO Frank Schilling".Name.com. 4 October 2014. Retrieved20 May 2021.
  16. ^Isenberg, Doug (6 January 2016)."'Adult' Domains Pose New Challenges for Trademark Owners".GigaLaw. Retrieved20 May 2021.
  17. ^Vaughn-Nichols, Steven J (29 January 2014)."Ready or not, here come the new Internet top-level domain names".ZDNet. Retrieved20 May 2021.
  18. ^Allemann, Andrew (23 January 2014)."Porn won't be allowed on the home page of .Sexy websites".Domain Name Wire. Retrieved20 May 2021.
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