Google adds .here and .eat to launch roster
Google has added the long-dormant gTLDs .here and .eat to its 2026 launch timetable, synchronized with the previously announced launch of .fly.
The company has told ICANN that it plans to runs its sunrise periods alongside .fly’s from September 1 until November 9, with general availability following immediately November 10.
All three gTLDs are expected to be open, with no eligibility requirements.
Google has had control over these domains for well over a decade. It’s perhaps informative that the application for .here talks up the potential for location-based services pointing to “the success of FourSquare and Groupon”, two companies whose stars are substantially less bright 14 years later.
.eat will compete against the likes of Identity Digital’s .cafe (which has roughly 25,000 names in its zone today), Punto 2012’s .rest (97,000 names), and Internet Naming Co’s .food (23,000 names).
Cybercrime link as t.me gets taken down
Speculation is rampant online right now after t.me, the domain used for short links by the messaging service Telegram, was apparently taken down by the .me registry, affecting as many as a billion users.
t.me seems to have gone dark shortly before 2000 UTC on Monday evening, with Whois/RDAP records showing it is now placed on serverHold status, which usually indicates a registry-level suspension and removal from the .me zone.
The suspension means that millions of short links using t.me are no longer functioning when clicked, leading instead to NXDOMAIN errors. Substituting t.me for telegram.me can be used as a workaround; the longer domain remains unsuspended.
.me is the ccTLD for Montenegro and is managed by local firm doMEn, which is mostly a partnership between US-based domain giants GoDaddy and Identity Digital.
Telegram and doMEn’s partners have yet to publicly address the outage, leading to a great deal of speculation online.
The most plausible explanation put forward so far but not yet confirmed is that the takedown relates to an order issued Monday by the US government’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, which has broad powers to sanction organizations and individuals it believes are linked to crime and terrorism.
OFAC, in an advisory that otherwise largely targets Cuban-linked entities, sanctioned domains and cryptocurrency wallets linked to First VPN Service (1VPNS), which it said was a Ukraine-based cybercrime group selling anonymity services to ransomware attackers and others.
OFAC said: “Numerous ransomware groups have purchased infrastructure from 1VPNS, which they have leveraged in attacks on U.S. companies and institutions—including to hide the origins of their attacks, deploy malware, and manage exfiltrated data.”
The July 13 order sanctioned three 1VPNS domain names — 1vpns.com, 1vpns.net, and 1vpns.org — that had in fact already been taken down by a Europol-led law enforcement operation in May.
But also on the list is the URL t.me/FirstVPNService. The equivalent telegram.me URL was not listed.
This has led to the suspicion that the t.me suspension is a classic case of government using a jurisdictional sledgehammer to crack an overseas nut — ordering doMEn’s US-based registry partners to take down the whole of t.me rather than asking Dubai-based Telegram to take down the specific offending URL or group.
Identity Digital, which holds the pen on .me domain edits, would have been powerless to resist an order from its own government.
While the takedown will doubtless be raised in ongoing policy discussions about when it is appropriate for a registry or registrar to suspend a domain over DNS abuse concerns, it’s less clear whether it will play into the Montenegro government’s nascent efforts to exert more local control over .me.
.dot is coming very soon
New new gTLD registry Dish DBS has revealed the launch dates for its .dot gTLD, and it’s coming pretty soon.
Information filed with ICANN shows that .dot is due to go to sunrise in just a couple weeks — from July 21 to October 19 — with a 12-day Early Access Period where early adopters can pay premium prices starting the next day.
General availability is scheduled for November 2. Pricing has not been revealed.
If you’re wondering about making a play for dot.dot, forget about it — the registry is using that as its primary domain for the gTLD.
The space will be open to all, with Dish describing it as “designed for builders and the things they create… products, communities, brands, or ideas worth a name of their own”.
It’s Dish’s second gTLD launch this year after .latino, which went GA on June 12.
.latino hasn’t exactly leapt out of the gates — it has fewer than 800 names in its zone file today and Google results are showing mainly a TLD-hopping movie piracy site and a Vietnamese gambling site.
Verisign will kill off 37 Kevins (and 22,000 others), complaint claims
Verisign’s plans to shut down a bunch of legacy services in the .name gTLD has been challenged by a registrant who believes he will lose his domains and email addresses if the registry goes ahead.
Doytchin Spiridonov, who works for Bulgarian registrar Dom.bg, has filed a Request for Reconsideration with ICANN, asking it to reverse its approval of Verisign’s Registry Service Evaluation Process requests that would enable it to turn off services that have been running for over 20 years.
As I reported in May, Verisign wants to stop selling third-level domains and related email services in .name, bringing the zone into line with virtually ever other gTLD, and delete existing names and emails in the process.
Spiridonov, who owns at least three third-level names, did the legwork on the .name zone file and discovered 22,288 domains would be affected. That includes 37 of my fellow Kevins!
His RfR (pdf) makes the case that ICANN’s approval of Verisign’s request was pretty opaque, involving private meetings between company and Org over several months.
“The approvals may adversely affect my ability to continue holding these registrations, may require migration to alternative services, may result in financial loss associated with prepaid registration periods, and may cause operational disruption and loss of continuity of internet identity associated with the affected registrations,” he wrote.
He further claims that Verisign misrepresented the impact of the changes in its RSEP, in which it stated that “There will not be any effect on the life cycle of domain names”.
Spiridonov says that the deletion of 22,000 domains makes this claim plainly untrue.
His RfR will be handled by ICANN’s board of directors.
Google names the dates for .fly launch
Google seems to have accelerated its launch plans for .fly, one of the 2012-round gTLDs it’s been sitting on for over a decade.
The company’s registry division has notified ICANN that it plans to open its mandatory sunrise period for .fly on September 1 and keep it open until November 9.
General availability for the gTLD, which according to its 2012 application will be open to all with no eligibility restrictions, seems to have been scheduled for November 10.
Earlier documentation filed with ICANN showed early 2027 launch dates.
The original application states that the namespace is intended for, as you might expect, airlines and the travel industry. As such, it would compete with the likes of .travel and .aero.
Google has already registered get.fly to itself, but the name does not yet appear to resolve.
A free, ethical new gTLD? Shurely shome mishtake
Another new gTLD applicant has revealed its plans, this time for a namespace where domains are given away for free and the enemy is Big Tech.
The Human-Centered Computing Foundation, a non-profit founded in Colorado last November, says it plans to apply for .self in the current ongoing ICANN application round.
It says it has already been approved under ICANN’s Applicant Support Program, meaning its application costs will be deeply discounted from the $227,000 standard base fee.
The organization has published little information about its plans, other than to say .self will be “designed and implemented from the ground up to support self-hosting”.
HCCF says it opposes the “prevailing economic models of the digital age — surveillance capitalism and entrapping SaaS platforms” that “prioritize corporate shareholder value over the fundamental needs, privacy, and autonomy of the individual.”
Because the domains will be free, domain investors are not welcome.
The organization’s web site lists Riley O’Donnell and Lucas Silva as CEO and COO respectively.
A search on DI’s Stringtel tool show domains ending in “self” occur about as frequently as existing gTLDs “contractors”, “bike” and “tattoo”, with “yourself” and “myself” counting for about half of the volume.
Another country jumps on the .ai bandwagon
Another Asian registry has added a .ai option at the third level of its ccTLD, seeking to capitalize on the growth of the artificial intelligence industry.
PANDI, the registry for Indonesia’s .id domains, said that it is launching .ai.id domain names this month.
The launch is coming in phases, with a trademarks-only sunrise period currently underway and running until July 2.
A month-long grandfathering period will follow from July 13, with registrants of existing .id names able to pick up their exact-match .ai.id equivalents.
From August 24 there’ll be a landrush period, with premium pricing, which runs for one month. General availability is slated for October 5.
PANDI already offers a multitude of third-level options under .id, of which .co.id is the most popular. Other options include .go.id, .my.id, .web.id, as well as vanilla second-level names.
It’s the second registry to offer .ai at the third level since the AI boom began, following Korea’s KISA, which started selling .ai.kr names, among others, last year.
Government to put the squeeze on .me registry partners
In what looks like bad news for GoDaddy and Identity Digital, Montenegro appears to be the latest government to demand a bigger share of revenues from its national ccTLD.
While already formally delegated to the government, .me is currently managed by doMEn, a partnership between the two American companies and local firm ME-net, but Montenegro is planning to grab much greater state control over the ccTLD.
And it seems to want more money too, according to an official document published this week.
Machine-translated, the document states:
The “.me” domain management model provides stable revenues for the state, but at the same time generates significantly higher overall economic benefits for the private agent and its (predominantly foreign) owners, with a relatively limited state participation in the total profit (about 35–36% of total revenues and about a quarter of the profit through the domestic partner [ME-net]).
The document states that .me generated €114 million ($132.7 million) between its 2008 launch and 2025, but that the government only received €41 million ($47.7 million), about 35-36% of the total.
The government reckons its share should be at least 50%.
The document says that doMEn has made €47 million in net profit over the same period, an amount in excess of what the state, which gets 33% of regular reg revenue and 70% of premium sales, received.
doMEn’s revenue in 2025 was almost €10.1 million ($11.75 million), having grown consistently every year since 2008, according to the document.
The document floats three options for a future registry model, ranging from full state ownership to a joint ownership with its back-end providers. All three options would give the government ultimate control over the TLD.
The government also explores three options for how the registry should be managed in future, from bringing it fully in-house to the current model of outsourcing all technical functions to a third party.
It concludes that the current model is probably the least risky right now, but notes that it could be used as a stepping-stone to a “hybrid” model where a state-owned registry handles key functions such as the registry of domains while key functions such as DNS are outsourced to specialists.
So in the short-term it appears that Montenegro is sufficiently risk-averse that doMEn’s owners may not lose the .me deal any time soon — a 2023 RFP for a new operator has been cancelled, the government said.
But it does appear they’re looking at a different regulatory regime in future, one in which more than half of their revenues go to the state, rather than into their own coffers.
Nominet outsources cybersquatting disputes to WIPO
The World Intellectual Property Organisation has tightened its stranglehold on domain name disputes worldwide, taking over administration of .uk’s Dispute Resolution Service.
Nominet said today that WIPO will start to manage DRS, which is similar to UDRP and has been around almost as long, from July 7. It said that the policy, fees, and panelists are not changing.
WIPO already handles cybersquatting complaints for scores of ccTLDs — some of which use standard UDRP, some of which have their own tweaked versions — as well as being the leading provider of gTLD dispute resolution.
Nominet said the move to outsource came as part of its .UK Registry Standardisation program, which is seeing it retire several non-core services.
Any DRS cases filed with Nominet before the July 7 cut-off will be processed to completion in the Nominet system.
.pay sunrise going gangbusters
Amazon’s .pay gTLD is seeing defensive sunrise registrations selling far in excess of what you’d normally expect from a new gTLD launch.
.pay went into sunrise April 14, with an expected 30-day window for trademark owners to register their brands, but Amazon recently extended the deadline until July 20.
As of yesterday, the .pay zone file contained 683 domains, almost all of which were added after April 14.
While modest compared to sunrises carried out 15 to 25 years ago, that’s far ahead of average, and .pay seems to be adding a handful of new domains every day.
Official ICANN figures tracking gTLD launches through August 2018 show that the mean average sunrise regs per TLD was roughly 137, with a median of just 77 across 491 sunrise periods.
I see two primary reasons why .pay is ahead of the average.
First, the sensitivity of the string. Any gTLD that invites trust and the transfer of money would likely be a prime target for phishing and other types of abuse.
Second, .pay is not on commercial domain blocking services, such as GoDaddy-led GlobalBlock, meaning the only sure-fire way to protect a brand right now is to engage with sunrise.
Amazon says it plans to offer a Limited Registration Period from July 20, during which domains can be registered by those “that conduct payment transactions online using an approved Payment Service Provider or Third-Party Payment Processor.”
General availability is pencilled in for February next year.






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