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.org

The domain name .org is a generic top-level domain (gTLD) of the Domain Name System (DNS) used on the Internet. The name is truncated from 'organization'. It was one of the original domains established in 1985, and has been operated by the Public Interest Registry since 2003. The domain was originally "intended as the miscellaneous TLD for organizations that didn't fit anywhere else."[1] It is commonly used by non-profit organizations, open-source projects, and communities, but is an open domain that can be used by anyone. The number of registered domains in .org has increased from fewer than one million in the 1990s, to ten million in 2012, and held steady between ten and eleven million since then.

.org
IntroducedJanuary 1, 1985; 38 years ago (1985-01-01)
TLD typeGeneric top-level domain
StatusActive
RegistryPublic Interest Registry (technical service by Afilias)
SponsorNot technically sponsored, but PIR is connected with the Internet Society
Intended useMiscellaneous organizations not fitting in other categories (generally noncommercial)
Actual useNonprofits; personal sites; open-source projects; some government websites; mostly used by non-commercial entities
Registration restrictionsNone
StructureRegistrations at second level permitted
DocumentsRFC 920; RFC 1591; ICANN registry agreement
Dispute policiesUDRP
DNSSECYes
Registry websitePublic Interest Registry

History

A 2020 protest led by the Electronic Frontier Foundation opposed to the proposed sale of org to a private firm.

The domain ".org" was one of the original top-level domains[2] and was established in January 1985. The other early top-level domains were .com, .us, .edu, .gov, .mil and .net. It was originally intended for non-profit organizations or organizations of a non-commercial character that did not meet the requirements for other gTLDs. The MITRE Corporation was the first group to register an .org domain with mitre.org in July 1985.[3] The TLD has been operated since January 1, 2003 by Public Interest Registry, who assumed the task from VeriSign Global Registry Services, a division of Verisign.[4]

In November 2019, the Public Interest Registry (PIR) was to be sold by the Internet Society to shell company Ethos Capital for US$1.135 billion.[5] The PIR also announced it would abandon its non-profit status to become a B Corporation.[6] However, this move was criticized by non-profits and various digital rights groups on concerns that Ethos Capital, a private equity firm, would raise fees or censor the domain. The sale was blocked by Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) in April 2020 on the basis that transfer of control of the domain to the private equity firm would create "unacceptable uncertainty" for non-profits that relied on the .org domain.[7]

Registrations

Registrations of subdomains are processed via accredited registrars worldwide. Anyone can register a second-level domain within org, without restrictions.[8][9] In some instances subdomains are being used also by commercial sites, such as craigslist.org. According to the ICANN Dashboard (Domain Name) report, the composition of the TLD is diverse, including cultural institutions, associations, sports teams, religious, and civic organizations, open-source software projects, schools, environmental initiatives, social, and fraternal organizations, health organizations, legal services, as well as clubs, and community-volunteer groups. In some cases subdomains have been created for crisis management.[which?]

 
The number of .org domains registered with the Public Interest Registry.

Although organizations anywhere in the world may register subdomains, many countries, such as Australia (au), Canada (ca), Japan (jp), Argentina (ar), Bolivia (bo), Uruguay (uy), Turkey (tr), Somalia (so), Sierra Leone (sl), Russia (ru), Bangladesh (bd), India (in) and the United Kingdom (uk), have established a second-level domain with a similar purpose under their ccTLD. Such second-level domains are usually named org or or.[citation needed]

In 2009, the .org domain consisted of more than 8 million registered domain names,[10] 8.8 million in 2010,[11] and 9.6 million in 2011.[12] The Public Interest Registry registered the ten millionth .ORG domain in June, 2012.[13] When the 9.5 millionth second-level domain was registered in December 2011, org became the third largest gTLD.[14]

As of November 2019, according to the Tranco ranking of the top 1M global domains,[15] domains under .org were about 6 % of the top 1000 and 7 % of the top 100 thousand and 1 million domains.

Internationalized domain names

The .org domain registry allows the registration of selected internationalized domain names (IDNs) as second-level domains.[16] For German, Danish, Hungarian, Icelandic, Korean, Latvian, Lithuanian, Polish, and Swedish IDNs this has been possible since 2005. Spanish IDN registrations have been possible since 2007.[9]

Domain name security

On June 2, 2009, The Public Interest Registry announced[17] that the org domain is the first open generic top-level domain and the largest registry overall that has signed its DNS zone with Domain Name System Security Extensions (DNSSEC). This allows the verification of the origin authenticity and integrity of DNS data by conforming DNS clients.

As of June 23, 2010, DNSSEC was enabled for individual second-level domains,[18] starting with 13 registrars.

Cost of registration

Since 2003, the Public Interest Registry (PIR) charged its accredited registrars a capped price of US$9.05 per year[19] for each domain name. The registrars may set their charges to end users without restrictions.

In April 2019, ICANN proposed an end to the price cap of .org domains[20] and effectively removed it in July in spite of having received 3,252 opposing comments and only six in favor.[21] A few months later, the owner of the domain, the Public Interest Registry, proposed to sell the domain to investment firm Ethos Capital.[22] After intense criticism from nonprofit groups and significant figures in Internet history, the proposal was scrapped.[23]

Regulatory positions

In March 2001, the Ethics Committee of the State Bar of Arizona issued Ethics Opinion 01-05, which discussed the limitations to which a law firm is subject when creating or using a website address for its law firm website. Among other conclusions, the Committee opined that a for-profit law firm may not use a domain name that contains the suffix “.org,” on the ground that such use “creates a false impression that the firm either is a non-profit or is in some way specifically affiliated with a non-profit.”

In light of the widespread use of the “.org” suffix by for-profit organizations in the years since Ariz. Ethics Op. 01-05 was issued, the Committee, reconsidering the matter in December 2011, concluded that the possibility that the public will be misled by a for-profit law firm’s use of “.org’ in its website address is remote, as a reasonable person, desiring to verify whether an entity is non-profit, would not rely solely on the entity’s website address.

Therefore, the mere use of “.org” by a for-profit law firm was declared not to be a violation of the Arizona Rules of Professional Conduct, and Opinion 01-05 was modified accordingly. Arizona lawyers were cautioned, however, that a lawyer or law firm may not use a domain name that falsely implies that the lawyer or law firm is affiliated with a particular non-profit organization or with a governmental entity or which otherwise is false or misleading.[24]

References

  1. ^ Postel, J. (March 1994), RFC 1591: Domain Name System Structure and Delegation, doi:10.17487/RFC1591, retrieved January 28, 2021
  2. ^ RFC 920, Domain Requirements, J. Postel, J. Reynolds, The Internet Society (October 1984)
  3. ^ Mitre.org
  4. ^ InterNIC - FAQs on org transition
  5. ^ "Ethos paid $1.135 billion for .Org: Internet Society reveals the price it is selling out for". November 29, 2019. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
  6. ^ "The Internet Society & Public Interest Registry: A New Era of Opportunity". .ORG (Press release). November 13, 2019. Retrieved November 23, 2019.
  7. ^ Robertson, Adi (April 30, 2020). "ICANN votes down controversial .org sale proposal". The Verge. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  8. ^ ICANN Top-Level Domains (gTLDs), Retrieved 2011-03-31.
  9. ^ a b Buy .ORG (Registrant) General Questions, Retrieved 2001-10-25.
  10. ^ Ragan, Steve (March 12, 2012). . The Tech Herald. Archived from the original on January 3, 2019. Retrieved August 3, 2012.
  11. ^ Berkens, Michael (February 14, 2011). ".ORG Grows Over 10% To Over 8.8 Million Registrations". The Domains. Retrieved August 3, 2012.
  12. ^ Prestipino, Peter (February 16, 2012). "The .ORG Registry Grows 10 Percent". Website Magazine. Retrieved August 3, 2012.
  13. ^ Goldstein, David (July 12, 2012). . DomainPulse. Archived from the original on March 11, 2020. Retrieved August 3, 2012.
  14. ^ (PDF). The Public Interest Registry. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 4, 2016. Retrieved April 4, 2012.
  15. ^ Le Pochat, Victor; Van Goethem, Tom; Tajalizadehkhoob, Samaneh; Korczynski, Maciej; Joosen, Wouter. "Tranco: A Research-Oriented Top Sites Ranking Hardened Against Manipulation" (PDF). Network and Distributed Systems Security (NDSS) Symposium 2019. doi:10.14722/ndss.2019.23386. ISBN 1-891562-55-X.
  16. ^ "Internationalized Domain Name (IDN) Questions". Public Interest Registry. Archived from the original on June 5, 2012. Retrieved March 28, 2010.
  17. ^ Ajay D'Souza. . Archived from the original on June 11, 2009. Retrieved July 2, 2009.
  18. ^ . Archived from the original on June 12, 2010. Retrieved June 23, 2010.
  19. ^ (PDF). Public Interest Registry. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 27, 2018. Retrieved January 16, 2018.
  20. ^ McCarthy, Kieren (April 26, 2019). "Internet industry freaks out over proposed unlimited price hikes on .org domain names". The Register. Retrieved November 23, 2019.
  21. ^ Lee, Timothy B. (July 1, 2019). "ICANN eliminates .org domain price caps despite lopsided opposition". Ars Technica. Retrieved November 23, 2019.
  22. ^ McCarthy, Kieren (November 20, 2019). "Internet world despairs as non-profit .org sold for $$$$ to private equity firm, price caps axed". The Register. Retrieved November 23, 2019.
  23. ^ Lohr, Steve (May 1, 2020). "A Private Equity Firm Is Blocked From Buying .Org". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved December 29, 2022.
  24. ^ Ariz. Ethics Op. 11-04.

External links

  • .ORG site
  • Save DotOrg

this, article, about, internet, domain, file, extension, other, uses, disambiguation, domain, name, generic, level, domain, gtld, domain, name, system, used, internet, name, truncated, from, organization, original, domains, established, 1985, been, operated, p. This article is about the Internet domain For the org file extension and other uses see org disambiguation The domain name org is a generic top level domain gTLD of the Domain Name System DNS used on the Internet The name is truncated from organization It was one of the original domains established in 1985 and has been operated by the Public Interest Registry since 2003 The domain was originally intended as the miscellaneous TLD for organizations that didn t fit anywhere else 1 It is commonly used by non profit organizations open source projects and communities but is an open domain that can be used by anyone The number of registered domains in org has increased from fewer than one million in the 1990s to ten million in 2012 and held steady between ten and eleven million since then orgIntroducedJanuary 1 1985 38 years ago 1985 01 01 TLD typeGeneric top level domainStatusActiveRegistryPublic Interest Registry technical service by Afilias SponsorNot technically sponsored but PIR is connected with the Internet SocietyIntended useMiscellaneous organizations not fitting in other categories generally noncommercial Actual useNonprofits personal sites open source projects some government websites mostly used by non commercial entitiesRegistration restrictionsNoneStructureRegistrations at second level permittedDocumentsRFC 920 RFC 1591 ICANN registry agreementDispute policiesUDRPDNSSECYesRegistry websitePublic Interest Registry Contents 1 History 2 Registrations 2 1 Internationalized domain names 3 Domain name security 4 Cost of registration 5 Regulatory positions 6 References 7 External linksHistory source source source source source source source A 2020 protest led by the Electronic Frontier Foundation opposed to the proposed sale of org to a private firm The domain org was one of the original top level domains 2 and was established in January 1985 The other early top level domains were com us edu gov mil and net It was originally intended for non profit organizations or organizations of a non commercial character that did not meet the requirements for other gTLDs The MITRE Corporation was the first group to register an org domain with mitre org in July 1985 3 The TLD has been operated since January 1 2003 by Public Interest Registry who assumed the task from VeriSign Global Registry Services a division of Verisign 4 In November 2019 the Public Interest Registry PIR was to be sold by the Internet Society to shell company Ethos Capital for US 1 135 billion 5 The PIR also announced it would abandon its non profit status to become a B Corporation 6 However this move was criticized by non profits and various digital rights groups on concerns that Ethos Capital a private equity firm would raise fees or censor the domain The sale was blocked by Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ICANN in April 2020 on the basis that transfer of control of the domain to the private equity firm would create unacceptable uncertainty for non profits that relied on the org domain 7 RegistrationsRegistrations of subdomains are processed via accredited registrars worldwide Anyone can register a second level domain within org without restrictions 8 9 In some instances subdomains are being used also by commercial sites such as craigslist org According to the ICANN Dashboard Domain Name report the composition of the TLD is diverse including cultural institutions associations sports teams religious and civic organizations open source software projects schools environmental initiatives social and fraternal organizations health organizations legal services as well as clubs and community volunteer groups In some cases subdomains have been created for crisis management which nbsp The number of org domains registered with the Public Interest Registry Although organizations anywhere in the world may register subdomains many countries such as Australia au Canada ca Japan jp Argentina ar Bolivia bo Uruguay uy Turkey tr Somalia so Sierra Leone sl Russia ru Bangladesh bd India in and the United Kingdom uk have established a second level domain with a similar purpose under their ccTLD Such second level domains are usually named org or or citation needed In 2009 the org domain consisted of more than 8 million registered domain names 10 8 8 million in 2010 11 and 9 6 million in 2011 12 The Public Interest Registry registered the ten millionth ORG domain in June 2012 13 When the 9 5 millionth second level domain was registered in December 2011 org became the third largest gTLD 14 As of November 2019 according to the Tranco ranking of the top 1M global domains 15 domains under org were about 6 of the top 1000 and 7 of the top 100 thousand and 1 million domains Internationalized domain names The org domain registry allows the registration of selected internationalized domain names IDNs as second level domains 16 For German Danish Hungarian Icelandic Korean Latvian Lithuanian Polish and Swedish IDNs this has been possible since 2005 Spanish IDN registrations have been possible since 2007 9 Domain name securityOn June 2 2009 The Public Interest Registry announced 17 that the org domain is the first open generic top level domain and the largest registry overall that has signed its DNS zone with Domain Name System Security Extensions DNSSEC This allows the verification of the origin authenticity and integrity of DNS data by conforming DNS clients As of June 23 2010 DNSSEC was enabled for individual second level domains 18 starting with 13 registrars Cost of registrationSince 2003 the Public Interest Registry PIR charged its accredited registrars a capped price of US 9 05 per year 19 for each domain name The registrars may set their charges to end users without restrictions In April 2019 ICANN proposed an end to the price cap of org domains 20 and effectively removed it in July in spite of having received 3 252 opposing comments and only six in favor 21 A few months later the owner of the domain the Public Interest Registry proposed to sell the domain to investment firm Ethos Capital 22 After intense criticism from nonprofit groups and significant figures in Internet history the proposal was scrapped 23 Regulatory positionsIn March 2001 the Ethics Committee of the State Bar of Arizona issued Ethics Opinion 01 05 which discussed the limitations to which a law firm is subject when creating or using a website address for its law firm website Among other conclusions the Committee opined that a for profit law firm may not use a domain name that contains the suffix org on the ground that such use creates a false impression that the firm either is a non profit or is in some way specifically affiliated with a non profit In light of the widespread use of the org suffix by for profit organizations in the years since Ariz Ethics Op 01 05 was issued the Committee reconsidering the matter in December 2011 concluded that the possibility that the public will be misled by a for profit law firm s use of org in its website address is remote as a reasonable person desiring to verify whether an entity is non profit would not rely solely on the entity s website address Therefore the mere use of org by a for profit law firm was declared not to be a violation of the Arizona Rules of Professional Conduct and Opinion 01 05 was modified accordingly Arizona lawyers were cautioned however that a lawyer or law firm may not use a domain name that falsely implies that the lawyer or law firm is affiliated with a particular non profit organization or with a governmental entity or which otherwise is false or misleading 24 References Postel J March 1994 RFC 1591 Domain Name System Structure and Delegation doi 10 17487 RFC1591 retrieved January 28 2021 RFC 920 Domain Requirements J Postel J Reynolds The Internet Society October 1984 Mitre org InterNIC FAQs on org transition Ethos paid 1 135 billion for Org Internet Society reveals the price it is selling out for November 29 2019 Retrieved January 17 2020 The Internet Society amp Public Interest Registry A New Era of Opportunity ORG Press release November 13 2019 Retrieved November 23 2019 Robertson Adi April 30 2020 ICANN votes down controversial org sale proposal The Verge Retrieved April 30 2020 ICANN Top Level Domains gTLDs Retrieved 2011 03 31 a b Buy ORG Registrant General Questions Retrieved 2001 10 25 Ragan Steve March 12 2012 DNSSEC to become standard on ORG domains by end of June The Tech Herald Archived from the original on January 3 2019 Retrieved August 3 2012 Berkens Michael February 14 2011 ORG Grows Over 10 To Over 8 8 Million Registrations The Domains Retrieved August 3 2012 Prestipino Peter February 16 2012 The ORG Registry Grows 10 Percent Website Magazine Retrieved August 3 2012 Goldstein David July 12 2012 ORG Seventh TLD To Pass Ten Millionth Registration Milestone DomainPulse Archived from the original on March 11 2020 Retrieved August 3 2012 The PIR Dashboard PDF The Public Interest Registry Archived from the original PDF on August 4 2016 Retrieved April 4 2012 Le Pochat Victor Van Goethem Tom Tajalizadehkhoob Samaneh Korczynski Maciej Joosen Wouter Tranco A Research Oriented Top Sites Ranking Hardened Against Manipulation PDF Network and Distributed Systems Security NDSS Symposium 2019 doi 10 14722 ndss 2019 23386 ISBN 1 891562 55 X Internationalized Domain Name IDN Questions Public Interest Registry Archived from the original on June 5 2012 Retrieved March 28 2010 Ajay D Souza DNSSEC announcement in The ORG Blog Archived from the original on June 11 2009 Retrieved July 2 2009 List of ORG registrars Archived from the original on June 12 2010 Retrieved June 23 2010 Exhibit A REGISTRATION FEES PDF Public Interest Registry Archived from the original PDF on January 27 2018 Retrieved January 16 2018 McCarthy Kieren April 26 2019 Internet industry freaks out over proposed unlimited price hikes on org domain names The Register Retrieved November 23 2019 Lee Timothy B July 1 2019 ICANN eliminates org domain price caps despite lopsided opposition Ars Technica Retrieved November 23 2019 McCarthy Kieren November 20 2019 Internet world despairs as non profit org sold for to private equity firm price caps axed The Register Retrieved November 23 2019 Lohr Steve May 1 2020 A Private Equity Firm Is Blocked From Buying Org The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved December 29 2022 Ariz Ethics Op 11 04 External links ORG site Save DotOrg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title org amp oldid 1158584800, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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