- .geo
Infobox Top level domain
name=.geo
background=#D2B48C
introduced=Not officially introduced; proposed in 2000
type=Proposed top-level domain
status=Unofficial proposal
registry=None yet
sponsor=SRI International
intendeduse=To associate Internet resources with geographical locations
actualuse=Not available for use
restrictions=To be used only to publish geographical data in specified system
structure=Would have structure based on geographical coordinates to give addresses to "georegistries", like acme.2e5n.10e30n.geo
document= [http://www.dotgeo.net/dotgeo/proposal/html/contents.html Proposal to ICANN]
disputepolicy=Normal sorts of "cybersquatting" are not possible given structure
website= [http://www.dotgeo.net/dotgeo/ DotGeo] |.geo was a
generic top-level domain proposed bySRI International to be used to associate Internet resources with geographical locations, via a system of "georegistrars" and "georegistries" with hierarchical addresses representing locations in a grid encircling theEarth . These addresses are not intended to be typed in directly by end-users (and hence are "messy" strings like acme.2e5n.10e30n.geo) but rather, would be used "behind the scenes" by software looking things up by location (possibly driven byGPS positioning in mobile devices).A number of schemes have been proposed or implemented in an attempt to classify Internet sites geographically; many of them do not require anything special in DNS (e.g., the [http://geourl.org GeoURL] initiative). The .geo proposal can, hence, be criticized as making unnecessary use of a top level domain where it might have been implemented using subdomains elsewhere (perhaps within
.arpa , the domain allocated for infrastructure lookups), or with non-DNS methods such as "meta" tags in Web sites..geo was proposed to
ICANN as part of the first round of new top level domains in2000 , but failed to gain approval, and there has not been any noticeable activity regarding this proposal for several years.
-GTLD
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