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“Rus, Hello!”

Cyrillic domains are great, but there should be a reasonable limit for everything - how did the state allow the registration of “.” domains? Guys, there is “.py” - Paraguay (http://www.presidencia.gov.py/) - what did they hope for? How did it happen that a lot of people registered yet it is still unknown whether “ru” will be in use at all? And there was enough power to declare the “.rus” zone ... well, there are cybersquatters there, they are not sorry, but even ordinary people can get caught being absolutely sure that buying a domain, giving real money, they get the guarantee of owning it, not a chance that once it can become a reality.

Cyrillic domains are archaism, the same archaism as grandmothers pies or mother's borscht in our age of McDonald's and convenience foods, but without these simple and understandable things, many cannot. We are young, we understand everything, but how can our mothers and fathers explain the Internet? Perhaps, the Internet is the most important for them, so judge: we are accustomed to the Internet and consider it to be the usual result of the information field development, and many of us consider it a “big garbage bin”, but imagine how our parents, who lived still under Brezhnev? Perhaps for them it is a very important step in the freedom that they have been waiting for, and very few of them can quickly find their way to the Latin alphabet, in the English language ...

I am for the increase and development of first-level domain zones (.travel, .mobi, .name, .xxx), so that all have enough good and pleasant domains to use (not store), and for Cyrillic domains, correctly being processed by the browser, they were redirected to the normal domain in the Latin alphabet (as in the .tk zone, where during registration you need to specify an existing real site). Cyrillic should complement, not replace. The situation when a person dials yandex.ru, then in the search bar “classmates” dials, and clicks on the first link - incorrect and redundant, and this should be changed.
A national domain must contain at least one character of the national alphabet (.rf, for example), this is One, and all sites with Cyrillic domain will have domain-doublers in Latin for Russian abroad that do not have Russian on a computer, these are two.
')
But only without interpreters ". Ru-. Rus", please.

Source: https://habr.com/ru/post/28961/


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