- Joined
- Apr 7, 2008
- Messages
- 142
- Reaction score
- 2
Hi folks,
I am the owner of baseball.us (Bill holds it for me, its NOT parked, but there is a miniportal), and I always wondered, why that TLD ".us" does not lift off.
I had offers up to 45,000 US Dollars, but I would be a fool to sell. I once also had football.us, and sold it years ago, I could kill myself.
Now, why does the average inhabitant of the United States of America has a Star and Stripes Flag in his front yard, claims to buy "American", is as proud as possible about his great Nation but does not even know his own TLD? Instead he is sharing his TLD with all nations in the world, thus giving away large portions of the potential USA namespace.
The answer is easy: The typical American does, what all his fellow Americans do. And since the registration rules for .us had been slightly complicated until its liberation, everyone took the "workaround" .com back in the early days, and then simply everyone followed that unwritten rule.
While staying in the US (5 to 6 times a year) I always ask everone (Ttaxidriver, waitress) about .us. And I have the impression, the knowledge about .us grows.
I am the owner of baseball.us (Bill holds it for me, its NOT parked, but there is a miniportal), and I always wondered, why that TLD ".us" does not lift off.
I had offers up to 45,000 US Dollars, but I would be a fool to sell. I once also had football.us, and sold it years ago, I could kill myself.
Now, why does the average inhabitant of the United States of America has a Star and Stripes Flag in his front yard, claims to buy "American", is as proud as possible about his great Nation but does not even know his own TLD? Instead he is sharing his TLD with all nations in the world, thus giving away large portions of the potential USA namespace.
The answer is easy: The typical American does, what all his fellow Americans do. And since the registration rules for .us had been slightly complicated until its liberation, everyone took the "workaround" .com back in the early days, and then simply everyone followed that unwritten rule.
While staying in the US (5 to 6 times a year) I always ask everone (Ttaxidriver, waitress) about .us. And I have the impression, the knowledge about .us grows.