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| 13 || [[March 25]], [[1986]] || [[Texas Instruments|TI.com]]
| 13 || [[March 25]], [[1986]] || [[Texas Instruments|TI.com]]
|-Ungermann-Bass|UB.com]]
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| 15 || [[April 25]], [[1986]] || [[AT&T|ATT.com]]
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| 16 || [[May 8]], [[1986]] || [[General Motors Research Laboratories|GMR.com]]
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| 16 || [[May 8]], [[1986]] || [[Tektronix|tek.com]]
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| 18 || [[July 10]], [[1986]] || [[FMC Corporation|FMC.com]]
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| 18 || [[July 10]], [[1986]] || [[Ungermann-Bass|UB.com]]
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| 20 || [[August 5]], [[1986]] || [[Bell Atlantic|bell-atl.com]]
| 20 || [[August 5]], [[1986]] || [[Bell Atlantic|bell-atl.com]]
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| 20 || [[August 5]], [[1986]] || [[General Electric|GE.com]]
| 20 || [[August 5]], [[1986]]
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| 20 || [[August 5]], [[1986]] || [[Grebyn Corporation|grebyn.com]]
| 20 || [[August 5]], [[1986]] || [[Grebyn Corporation|grebyn.com]]
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| 20 || [[August 5]], [[1986]] || [[National Semiconductor|NSC.com]]
| 20 || [[August 5]], [[1986]] || [[National Semiconductor|NSC.com]]
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<!-- stargate | 28 || [[September 29]], [[1986]] || [[Siemens AG|siemens.com]]
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| 26 || [[September 2]], [[1986]] || [[Boeing|boeing.com]]
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| 27 || [[September 18]], [[1986]] || [[Interrupt Technology Corporation|ITCorp.com]]
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| 28 || [[September 29]], [[1986]] || [[Siemens AG|siemens.com]]
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| 29 || [[October 18]], [[1986]] || [[Pyramid Technology|pyramid.com]]
| 29 || [[October 18]], [[1986]] || [[Pyramid Technology|pyramid.com]]

Revision as of 17:38, 1 November 2007

Template:Three other uses

.com
Verisign logo
Introduced1985
TLD typeGeneric top-level domain
StatusActive
RegistryVeriSign
SponsorNone
Intended useCommercial entities (worldwide)
Actual useUsed for virtually any commercial or non-commercial website and is generally accepted as the standard for TLDs
Registration restrictionsNone
StructureRegistrations at second level permitted
DocumentsRFC 920; RFC 1591; ICANN registry agreement
Dispute policiesUDRP
Registry websiteVeriSign COM NET Registry

.com (commercial) is a generic top-level domain (gTLD) used on the Internet's Domain Name System. It was one of the original top-level domains (TLDs), established in January 1985, and has grown to be the largest TLD in use. It was originally administered by the United States Department of Defense. The DoD contracted its maintenance to Stanford Research Institute. On January 1, 1993 the National Science Foundation assumed responsibility for its maintenance, as .com was primarily being used for non-defense interests. The NSF contracted its maintenance to Network Solutions. In 1995 the NSF authorized NSI to begin charging registrants (of .org and .net as well as .com) an annual fee, for the first-time since its inception. Initially it was $50 per year, with $35 going to NSI, and $15 going to a government fund. New registrations had to pay for the first two years, making the new-domain registration fee $100. In 1997 the United States Department of Commerce assumed authority over it (along with the rest of the generic top level domains). It is currently operated by VeriSign, which had acquired Network Solutions. (VeriSign later spun off Network Solutions' non-registry functions into the current company which continues as a registrar.) In the English language it is consistently pronounced as a word, dot-com, and has entered common parlance this way.

Although .com domains are officially intended to designate commercial entities (others such as government agencies or educational institutions have different top-level domains assigned to them), there has been no restriction on who can register .com domains since the mid-1990s. The opening of the .com registry to the public coincided with the commercialization and popularization of the Internet, and .com quickly became the most common top-level domain for websites. Many companies which flourished in the period between 1997-2001 (the time known as the "dot-com bubble") went so far as to incorporate .com into the company name; these became known as dot-coms or dot-com companies. The introduction of .biz in 2001, which is restricted to businesses, has had little impact on the popularity of .com.

Although companies anywhere in the world can register .com domains, many countries have a second-level domain with a similar purpose under their own ccTLD. Such second-level domains are usually of the form .com.xx or .co.xx, where xx is the ccTLD. Argentina (.com.ar), Japan (.co.jp), New Zealand (.co.nz), India (.co.in), the People's Republic of China (.com.cn), Pakistan (.com.pk), and the United Kingdom (.co.uk) are all examples.

Many noncommercial sites, such as those of nonprofit organizations or governments, use .com addresses. Some consider this to be contrary to the domain's original purpose and might say that a .org, .gov, or other more specific TLD might be more appropriate for such sites. However, many organizations prefer the recognizability of a .com domain to a less familiar one. As well, the original purposes of many of the top level domains have become irrelevant without restrictions on registrations.

Registrations are processed via registrars accredited by ICANN; internationalized domain names are also accepted.

Transfer procedures

Domains can be transferred between registrars. Prior to October 2006 the procedure used by Verisign was complex and unreliable - requiring a notary public to verify the identity of the registrant requesting a domain transfer. In October 2006, a new procedure, requiring the losing registrar to provide an authorization code on instruction from the registrant (also known as EPP code) was introduced by Verisign to reduce the incidence of domain hijacking.com(commercial)

List of oldest .com domains

The following are the 100 oldest still-existing registered .com domains [1]:

Rank Create date Domain name
1 March 15, 1985 symbolics.com
2 April 24, 1985 BBN.com
3 May 24, 1985 think.com
4 July 11, 1985 MCC.com
5 September 30, 1985 DEC.com
6 November 7, 1985 northrop.com
7 January 9, 1986 xerox.com
8 January 17, 1986 SRI.com
9 March 3, 1986 HP.com
10 March 5, 1986 bellcore.com
11 March 19, 1986 IBM.com
11 March 19, 1986 sun.com
13 March 25, 1986 intel.com
13 March 25, 1986 TI.com
20 August 5, 1986 bell-atl.com
20 August 5, 1986 20 August 5, 1986 grebyn.com
20 August 5, 1986 ISC.com
20 August 5, 1986 NSC.com