• Mojave@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      To add on to this because the Wikipedia page doesn’t actually explain it at all for some reason:

      Nominet Ltd was in charge of all .uk top level domain registrations, and they simply decided that they wouldn’t allow anybody to register with a raw .uk domain. As far as I can tell, they allowed .co.uk, .org.uk, .me.uk, and other such things according to what the websites claimed purposes were going to be. In 2014 they changed their minds and decided anyone can apply for the raw .uk top level domain, and now newer websites can just be called shitcum.uk

      I can imagine a few reasons why huge websites like Google and Amazon don’t switch their URLs to google.uk just from a business/corporate perspective. It’s probably seen as a lot of money and man-hours to register the new domains, redirect their .co.uk to the new .uk domain (for how long do you even want to pay for both domains?), and the headaches of janky issues arising from the changed domain like possibly third-party APIs breaking or Boomers bookmarks no longer working.

    • zerbey@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      That’s been around a long time too, I worked for an ISP in the 90s and would have customers using it. They charged way more than Nominet at the time as well.

  • Clbull@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I used to work for a major (right wing) British tabloid a few years back. We had a promotion with an online storefront that used a .co domain.

    The amount of calls and emails we got from people struggling to access the website because they decided to add ‘.uk’ at the end because merely ‘.co’ didn’t seem right is astronomical.

  • mindbleach
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    1 year ago

    IIRC, top-level domains were originally intended to be more rigid, the way .gov and .edu are reliably for goverment sites and schools. So just having .uk wouldn’t mean anything. It only signifies that a .co, .org, or .gov domain was registered in the UK. By the time other countries’ registries became noteworthy, the whole com-net-org distinction was almost entirely lost, so they didn’t bother forcing those subdivisions of their top-level domain.

    The reason American DNS doesn’t apply a .us extension everywhere is because we invented it. Neener neener.

  • LilDumpy@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I didn’t know you could use .uk and it will take you to the same place, but also I’m an American and mostly use “.com”