.me

.me
Introduced 2006
TLD type Country code top-level domain
Status Active
Registry domain.me (doMEn)
Sponsor Montenegro Government of Montenegro
Intended use Entities connected with  Montenegro
Actual use Positions itself for global use like a personal namespace .name: can be registered and used for any purpose. Used by businesses in Maine, Middle East, and Montenegro and is popular for domain hacks.
Registration restrictions None
Structure Second-level registrations available worldwide; third-level registrations under certain second-level names available within Montenegro
Documents Policies
Dispute policies Sunrise Policy, and UDRP
Website Domain.me
DNSSEC Yes

.me is the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for Montenegro.

The .me top level domain replaced the .yu (Yugoslavia) and .cg.yu domains previously used by Serbia and Montenegro.

The .me registry is operated by doMEn, which won a contract to do so after a bid process conducted by the government of Montenegro and was launched through various accredited registrars around the world.

Introduction

Montenegro declared its independence from Serbia and Montenegro on 3 June 2006, after a majority of Montenegrins supported independence in a national referendum. As a constituent part of that country, Montenegro had unofficially been using the .cg.yu second-level domain, whilst the .cs TLD had been assigned to Serbia and Montenegro in 2003 following the breakup of Yugoslavia, but remained unused. Montenegro was assigned the ISO 3166-1 two-letter code "ME", which was allocated by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) in September 2006[1] (most other possible abbreviations of Montenegro (MO, MN, MT, MG and MR) and its Montenegrin name Crna Gora (CG) having already been taken).

In September 2007, ICANN delegated the .me domain to the Government of Montenegro,[2] with the former .yu domain to be operated temporarily by the .rs domain registry (Serbian National Register of Internet Domain Names) until its eventual abolition on or before 30 September 2009. Delegation of root name servers was approved by IANA,[3] establishing .me. The .me domain became active on 24 September 2007 and a "Public Invitation for selection of the Agent for domain registration under the national Internet domain of Montenegro" was posted on 14 November. doMEn d.o.o.—a Montenegro-based joint venture whose partners are Afilias, GoDaddy.com, and ME-net d.o.o.—was selected as the new registry operator.

On 6 May 2008, the General Sunrise period for the .me registry began for all eligible trademark holders worldwide, and on 16 July 2008, registration was made available for all .me domains at various registrars.

.ME registry
www.domen.me .ME registry in Montenegrin
www.domain.me .ME registry in English
www.nic.me Former .ME registry
Government of Montenegro
www.me Montenegro general information
www.gov.me Government of Montenegro
www.szr.gov.me Secretariat for Economic Development
University of Montenegro
www.ucg.ac.me University of Montenegro main site
www.cis.ac.me Centre for Information Systems
www.etf.ac.me Faculty of Electrical Engineering
www.ef.ac.me
www.ekonomija.ac.me
Faculty of Economics
www.pmf.ac.me Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics

Domain structure for .me

The .me extension was assigned to Montenegro as a country code after it became an independent nation in June 2006. However, the Montenegro government decided .me would be operated as a generic name after considering the potential worldwide appeal for the extension.[4]

Third-level registrations are available to Montenegrin citizens and companies in the following zones:

Apart from the official .me hierarchy, there are a number of private second-level domains powered by Namely PRO platform.

Sunrise, land rush, and open registration periods

On 6 May 2008, the .me registry opened the Sunrise Period for all eligible trademark holders anywhere in the world.

Throughout June and July 2008, multiple land rush applications were received, which resulted in more than 2,500 land rush auctions that were held during July and August 2008. Go Live was opened on 17 July 2008 when registrations were made available for all unreserved .me domains via various registrars.

During the .me land rush auction period, more than US$ 2,000,000 was generated with names like insure.me and sync.me going to the highest bidder.

At the beginning of August 2008, 100,000 .me domain names were registered.[5] Sources say part of the worldwide appeal for the .me domain extension is the marketing aspect.

In 2008 in terms of the number of web pages indexed by Google among all TLDs, .me sites have enjoyed the fastest growth with more than 50% a month. In the same year, .me topped its potential rivals .mobi and .asia in Alexa Internet top one million websites with 341 .me sites versus 233 .mobi sites and 86 .asia sites. Extra potential of .me is revealed considering the fact that .mobi was launched two years before .me and .asia four months before .me.

By the middle of February 2009, 200,000 .me domain names were registered.[6][7]

On 15 May 2009, number of registered .me domain names rose to 250,000.[8]

In less than a year .me became more popular than .asia, .jobs, .coop, .aero, .int, .mil, .museum, .name, .pro, .tel, .travel, and other 200 country code top-level domains.[9]

By 2010, over 320,000 .me domains had been purchased, making it the fastest-selling top-level domain in history.[10]

Known hacks

Most .me domain names were purchased as domain hacks in English and, to a lesser extent, Dutch; 71% of names were applied for by applicants in the United States.[11] Because of the possibility of owning pure noun and verb combinations, their prices have stayed high: during the sunrise period, insure.me went for $68,005, and judge.me sold for $8000 in 2011.

.me has been used as an abbreviation for Middle East, Maine, and the accusative case of ja (I in South Slavic languages). Other examples of domain hacks include deviantArt (fav.me), WordPress (wp.me),[12] the Despicable Me website, and MeetMe. .me was used by the Canadian Conservative Party for the website ignatieff.me, a site attacking Michael Ignatieff, the leader of the opposition Liberal Party. Later, domain name ignatieff.me has expired and picked by one of the domainers who converted it into a political blog.

Premium domains

Excluding the extension, .me domain names must be between 3 and 63 characters in length,[13] but a few exceptions have been granted mainly for URL shortening purposes:

Yahoo! was using me.me for its project Meme, however the domain name was taken back by the .me registry when the company closed down the portal.

Trademark disputes

In 2008 three trademark cases were filed with the WIPO Arbitration and Mediation Center. All three domain names (creditmutuel.me, porsche.me, and exxonmobil.me) were transferred to the complainants.[15]

.cg.yu

Prior to the introduction of .me, the most used domain in Montenegro was the second-level domain .cg.yu under .yu, the Internet domain name of Montenegrin ISP T-Crnogorski Telekom, which was allowed to such Internet providers. The acronym "CG" was used because of the native name Crna Gora. When .yu top-level domain was phased out, all e-mail addresses ending with @cg.yu were replaced with @t-com.me, and the web sites moved, variously, mostly under .me.

See also

References

  1. "ISO 3166 Maintenance Agency - Newsletter V-12" (PDF). 26 September 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 January 2012.
  2. "Preliminary Report for Special Meeting of the ICANN Board of Directors - 11 September 2007". ICANN. 11 September 2007. Retrieved 7 July 2013.
  3. "IANA .me whois information". Iana.org. Retrieved 7 July 2013.
  4. ".ME Opens Registration on July 17". Web Host Industry Review. 14 July 2008. Retrieved 20 February 2014.
  5. "ME DOMAIN CROSSES 100,000 MILESTONE | 5 August 2008". Domain.me. 21 December 1983. Retrieved 7 July 2013.
  6. Global Sensation - .ME Hits 200,000 Registered Domains | 10 February 2009
  7. Dot Me Directory of 100,000+ domains | 13 February 2009
  8. "| .ME Domains Hit Quarter-Million Milestone | 20 May 2009". Archived from the original on 27 May 2009. Retrieved 20 May 2009.
  9. White paper by Brands-and-Jingles - One Year of .ME: 2009 - "ME" branded names for marketeers | 17 July 2009
  10. Dave Lee (9 January 2010). "Montenegro's .me domain name gain". BBC. Archived from the original on 10 January 2010. Retrieved 9 January 2010.
  11. ".ME in the News - .ME Domain Crosses 100,000 Milestone". 5 August 2008. Archived from the original on 19 September 2010.
  12. WP.me - shorten your links. Accessed 15 August 2009. Archived 17 August 2009.
  13. General Registration Policies. Domain.ME. Downloaded on 31 May 2009. . Accessed 31 May 2009. Archived 2 June 2009.
  14. "ID.ME Chooses a .ME Domain". Domain.ME. 22 July 2013. Retrieved 22 July 2013.
  15. WIPO (25 April 2013). "WIPO UDRP Domain Name Decisions | 2008". Wipo.int. Retrieved 7 July 2013.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, April 12, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.