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GAM - WEBAbout Domain Names and Where to Buy One
What exactly is a domain? You are visiting a domain right now, www.gam-web.com is a registered domain name. When creating a new web site, it is recommended that you register (buy) a domain name for your use. The name could become one of your trademarks. Larger companies already have established trademarks, and registering a domain that infringes on an existing trademark is prohibited. Registering a domain name is not a permanent process - registration is temporary for one year at a time (although you can register for multiple years at one time also). Once your registration time is over, you can renew your domain name, or surrender it back to the domain registration service. In the 1990s the exclusive right to use Internet domain names—unique sequences of letters (divided, by convention, into segments separated by periods) that correspond to the numerical “Internet Protocol Addresses” that identify each of the millions of computers connected to the Internet—became a highly contested issue. Domain-name labels enable “packets” of information transmitted over the Internet to be delivered to their intended destinations. The mnemonic character of domain names (e.g., http://www.gam-web.com) also assists consumers in locating Internet-based businesses.
As commercial activity on the Internet grew, evocative domain names became increasingly valuable, and struggles over them multiplied, especially as a result of the activities of so-called “cybersquatters,” who registered popular domain names with the aim of selling them to businesses at huge profits. The task of allocating domain names throughout the world and of resolving disputes over them has been largely assumed by a private organization, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN). With the assistance of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), ICANN promulgated a Uniform-Domain-Name-Dispute-Resolution Policy to resolve domain-name controversies and has licensed several arbitration services to interpret and enforce it. In 1999 the United States established a similar national system, known as the “Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act,” which is administered by the federal courts. Under the law, individuals can be fined up to $100,000 for registering a domain name in “bad faith.” Defenders of the law contended that it was crucial to protect the commercial value of trademarks and to shield businesses from extortion. Critics argued that the legislation was too broad and could be used by companies to suppress consumer complaints, parody, and other forms of free speech. There are many places in the internet marketplace where you can buy your own domain. The most common domains end in .COM although there are many others available today. Every country also has a two-letter country code (the one for the United States is .US). There are others, such as .NET, .ORG, .INFO that are less commonly used.
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