.de

.de
Introduced 1986
TLD type Country code top-level domain
Status Active
Registry DENIC
Sponsor DENIC eG
Intended use Entities connected with Flag of Germany.svg Germany
Actual use Very popular in Germany
Registration restrictions Must have administrative contact resident in Germany
Structure May register at second level
Documents
Dispute policies DISPUTE-Entries
Website denic.de

.de is the country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for the Federal Republic of Germany. DENIC (the Network Information Centre responsible for .de domains) does not require specific second-level domains, as it is the case with the .uk domain range for example.

The name is based on the first two letters of the German name for Germany (Deutschland). Prior to 1989, East Germany had a separate ISO 3166-1 code (dd) but it was never assigned its own ccTLD; de is the only German ccTLD that ever existed.

.de is currently the second most popular ccTLD in terms of number of registrations, after .cn, and is third after .com and .cn among all TLDs. [1][2]

The first point of registration for .de domains was at the Department of Computer Science of the University of Dortmund. uni-dortmund.de was among the first registered .de-domains.

.de registrations may be directly ordered from DENIC but it is faster and cheaper to do so via a DENIC member (registrar).

The domain name must have at least 3 letters and may not be exclusively composed of numbers. The only current known exceptions are db.de [1] (Deutsche Bahn), ix.de [2], and hq.de [3] which were registered before the three letter rule was adopted.

Registrations of internationalized domain names are also accepted so that all diacritics of German may be used.[3]

In many romanic languages, e.g., Spanish, French, Romanian and Portuguese, "de" expresses the genitive of a noun (like "of" in English). This is exploited in domain registrations under the German TLD for romance language webhosts that offer customized sites, like elforo.de (theforum.of), cleverly encoding the site name into the URL path, such as elforo.de/wikipedia, meaning theforum.of/wikipedia.

References

  1. Domain Names Registered Under ".CN" by CNNIC
  2. Comparison of international Domain Numbers by DENIC
  3. "IDN character list". DENIC (2004-03-01). Retrieved on 2008-08-13.

External links