Recent Posts
- Whois Disclosure System likely over a year away
- Belgium slashes its ICANN funding in “mission creep” protest
- Diversity takes a hit as NomCom replaces two ICANN directors with newcomers
- RDNH loser files second appeal
- Group crowdfunding crypto to apply to ICANN for blockchain gTLD
- Buyer “phasing out” domain “bought for $2.2 million”
- ShortDot drops premium fees on millions of domains
- Tucows’ domains business stagnates again in Q2
- Malaysia relaxes travel restrictions ahead of ICANN 75
- GMO to sell Unstoppable’s crypto domains
- More rules, but cozier ICANN 75 expected
- India offers dollar regs to celebrate independence
- auDA updates on 2LD .au sales
- At $15 million, nfts.com becomes second-biggest domain sale ever
- Now Nokia scraps a dot-brand
- InternetNZ appoints new CEO
- Looks like XYZ bought another gTLD
- Bugatti dumps dot-brand under new owners
- In pictures: from tuk-tuks to cheese wheels, every ICANN national stereotype 2016-2022
- Did ICANN pay for most meeting attendees to show up in The Hague?
- Verisign announces ANOTHER price increase as regs slide
- CentralNic signs Greenland deal
- Early “dot-brand” adopter wants to scrap its gTLD
- Verisign to mandate 2FA for .com registrars
- Unstoppable valued at over $1 billion after huge new investment
- ICANN staffer to referee closed generics fight
- Covid vaccine maker takes RDNH loss to ICANN board
- Guy asks ICANN to shut down prostitution site
- No smoking! Rules laid down as .kids reveals launch dates
- Nominet sold security unit for a dollar after blowing $23.5 million
- CentralNic revenue almost doubles
- Feds warn of Covid risk from “dark” Whois
- ICANN names NomCom chairs
- ICANN’s top brass get pay raises
- New gTLD prep work delayed until December
- New gTLDs WILL be delayed by Whois work
- ICANN backtracks on legal waiver for ICANN 75
- Community tells ICANN to walk and chew gum at the same time
- Five things I learned from UK prime minister candidates’ domain names
- Universal unacceptance? ICANN lets XYZ dump languages from UNR gTLDs
- ICANN terminates these three deadbeat registrars
- .xyz kicks France out of the top 10 TLDs — Verisign
- ICANN puts blockchain on the agenda for good
- New gTLD in trouble as largest registrar gets suspended
- ICANN picks comms firm for new gTLDs outreach
- Donuts goes with bland, forgettable, for new company name [rant]
- Broker says it will sue after DNS abuse sting operation
- Unstoppable targets another city gTLD with free domains
- Dynadot takes down its own web site after apparent breach
- The slow crawl to closed generics at ICANN 74
- Controversial Chinese firm among two newly revealed UNR gTLD buyers
- Over 900 people show up for ICANN 74
- Verisign and Afilias spar over .web delays
- Hamburg selected for next year’s ICANN AGM
- Amazon governments not playing ball with Amazon’s .amazon
- High fives, or elbows only? ICANN 74 intros traffic light system for socializing
- NetBeacon goes live for DNS abuse reporting
- As registration closes, many ICANN 74 sessions at bursting point
- Belarusian domains to change hands
- As GoDaddy shutters URL shortener, could x.co come back on the market?
- Nominet opens directorship nominations
- GoDaddy acquires two education-themed gTLDs
- Crypto domains: a feminist issue?
- Turkey name change could free up gTLD string
- Porkbun offering free .gay domains for Pride month
- DNSAI to name most-abused registries, registrars
- NameSilo profitable in Q1
- Meds regulator won’t say why it gets domains suspended
- Porkbun hits a million domains
- Porn names to feature at NamesCon Global
- Pizza company suffers from penisland syndrome
- Seat reservations and waiting lists on the cards for ICANN 74
- New gTLDs or Whois access? What’s more important?
- Domain sales down even as revenue booms at CentralNic
- ICANN kicks the can on .web yet again
- ALAC’s brutal takedown of that “aggressive” ICANN 74 coronavirus waiver
- .link gTLD buyer revealed
- After 10 months, ICANN board “promptly” publishes its own minutes
- China yanks Daily Stormer domain after Buffalo mass shooting
- Fewer domain companies closing down than expected
- ICANN highlights “not getting things done” risk
- Another single-TLD brand protection service planned
- Dot Hip Hop slashes prices 80% in relaunch
- Three gTLDs to lose Donuts trademark protection
- Tucows to reanimate Tucows brand as sales flatten
- Blockchain domains pose “significant risks” to internet, says ICANN
- Russian registry hit with second breach notice after downtime
- Two countries could lose registrar competition after breach notices
- .tattoo — another UNR gTLD auction winner emerges
- Neustar now linked to scandal in the Catholic church
- SSAD: Whois privacy-busting white elephant to be shelved
- ICANN reports shocking increase in pandemic scams
- Kaufmann selected for ICANN board
- Secondary market fluffs GoDaddy amid slowdown concerns
- Washington DC picked for ICANN 77
- UDRP suspended in Ukraine
- Gee, thanks. auDA cuts price of .au names by five cents
- ICANN salary porn: 2021 edition
- A sign of things to come? Verisign slashes outlook in post-pandemic slowdown
- UDRP comments reveal shocking lack of trust in ICANN process
- CentralNic sees 51% growth in Q1
- Ukraine won’t delete domains until war is over
- Covid surge scuppers ICANN LA meetings
- Vox Pop defends its favorite cybersquatter
- ICANN picks recipient of $1 million Ukraine aid
- More friction over closed generics
- ICANN’s Covid-19 waiver formally appealed
- GoDaddy and XYZ sign away rights after UNR’s crypto gambit
- Verisign wipes free TLDs from the world stats
- ICANN picks 28 registries for abuse audit
- TMCH turning off some brand-blocking services
- Bye-bye Alice’s Registry
- .kids goes live, plans to launch this year
- ICANN suggests its Covid waiver may be worthless
- Domain sales exempt from US sanctions on Russia
- African Union can’t register .africa domain
- Microsoft seizes domains Russia was using to attack Ukraine
- Blacknight objects to ICANN 74 Covid waiver
- DNS Abuse Institute names free tool NetBeacon, promises launch soon
- Radix renewals drive growth as revenue hits $38 million
- GoDaddy formally signs .tv registry contract
- ICANN lists the reasons I probably won’t be going to ICANN 74
- A public apology for my April Fool’s blog post
- ICANN accidentally summons Lesser Old One in DNSSEC snafu
- ICANN “volunteers” want to get paid for sitting through pandemic Zoom calls
More dot-brands dump their gTLDs
A further three new gTLDs have applied to ICANN for self-termination over the last few months, bringing the total to 76.
They’re all dot-brands: .sbs, .rightathome and .symantec.
The most recent application came from the Australian broadcaster SBS, for Special Broadcasting Service. This seems to be a case of a brand owner briefly experimenting with redirects to its .au domain, then deciding against it.
.symantec is biting the dust because the security company Symantec recently rebranded as NortonLifeLock Inc.
.rightathome also appears to be a case of a discontinued brand, in this case formerly used by consumer products firm SC Johnson.
Related posts (automatically generated):
First three new gTLD objections thrown out
Will VeriSign change its name?
ShortDot bought another gTLD. Guess what .sbs stands for now?
Tagged: .rightathome, .sbs, dot-brands, ICANN, new gTLDs, symantec, termination
Wow! All this chatter about registrations of fraudulent domains at the registrar level (elsewhere in DomainIncite.com), BUT WHAT ABOUT THE SNAKE OIL SALESMEN who solicited all these gTLD applications while offering their “expertise”?
The upfront cost of 76 withdrawn dotBrand applications at $185,000 each totals USD14,060,000 – yes, OVER 14 MILLION DOLLARS. This figure meets the threshold for “grand theft” in any legal system following the (Neanderthal, property Trumps life) British legal system.
Add to that figure the “consulting fees” charged by such “experts” – such as Neustar, which breathlessly touted the new TLD round as “THE NEXT BIG THING.” Fortunately for those left standing – and perhaps more than a few of those looking for avenues to recoup their loses in the near term, Neustar has now exited the domain name industry … but may not be beyond the reach of the courts.
Neustar’s exit is truly SUCH A LOSS OF SUCH EXPERTISE, MOVING FROM STRENGTH TO STRENGTH, as they did from their hype of the nTLD round, to their loss of the FCC number portability contract (oops!), to the .AU acquisition (YIKES!), to the sale to Golden Gate. Today, in fact, Neustar appears to be now re-inventing themselves as consulting EXPERTS to those corporations with too much money and too little corporate expertise to know the difference.
One shall not mention the installation of their current “dishonest and week” CEO who, as a “Wharton man,” carries all of the weaknesses – and none of the billions (if, in fact, any) – of the Wharton man currently cornholing the American presidency.
President (and former U.S. General) Dwight D. Eisenhower warned America to “beware the military-industrial complex.” As the love-child of Lockheed Martin and Perot Systems (Perot, as in “crazy aunt in the attic” Ross Perot who, as a third-party candidate, cost George H.W. Bush a second term in favor of Bill – “I did not have sexual relations with that woman” – Clinton) – Neustar has and continues to pursue – albeit to-date fatally – the military industrial complex business model of “whatever the traffic will bear” and remains unWOKE to the concept of “free market forces.”
Quel dommage. How many investors in Neustar stock have to be sacrificed on their CEO’s Altar of Hubris before they realize, as Forrest Gump did that, “Stupid is as stupid does.”
N’import de qui
Spot-on.
I will be dumping 3 of mines by the end of this year. Originally they were just used as a shortcut to redirect to a specific page of the website, but its really not needed.
The .BRANDs were a big mistake after large-scale Domain Tasting ended in 2007. They were largely sold on the basis of brands and trademarks being massively abused. Many of the .BRAND zones are NIC-only zones.
I believe that while most brands indeed fell to the fallacy of defending against abuse, some saw it as a conditional opportunity, one that if people moved away from the dominant TLD (.com in the US, local ccTLD in a lot of countries), they would have hedged their bets.
But this hasn’t happened yet, and might never happen. Metlife looks more like the first, Intel more like the second.
I say they are a great tool and we will sell plenty of them for the next round.
They need time and to get rid of the $25,000 annual Icann tax.
Does any brand actually use them beyond an expensive redriect or a corporate magazine / company information portal? Don’t most if not all even after 8 years still use .com and the local country code for real business and customers?
.intel and .metlife also bite the dust.
GTLD = Good To Lose Dollars
,com is a gTLD.