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.gay Generic Top Level Domain(gTLD.) is now open for public

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61 points by mindfreeze 5 years ago · 142 comments

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tuxxy 5 years ago

I preordered https://areyou.gay a while ago.

I don't know what to put on it, but I would like to host a FAQ or something for people who are questioning their sexuality and make it v wholesome.

  • messe 5 years ago

    As a temporary placeholder, I suggest either putting a big <h1>Yes</h1>, or maybe have it be <h1>No</h1> dependent on an RNG. In the same vein as http://arethebritsatitagain.com/

  • ffpip 5 years ago

    Or make a huge profit selling subdomains.

    person-name.areyou.gay ?

  • arkitaip 5 years ago

    I think you should transfer the domain to a gay rights org or similar because this type of domain squatting is obnoxious. I mean, you didn't even have a plan for the domain, just registered it for the novelty.

    • tuxxy 5 years ago

      Isn't the open internet great? I can register a domain to use for my own purposes so I can also have a voice.

      • ideals 5 years ago

        You don't have a voice that's why you're asking here. So someone gave you a good suggestion and you shit on it. You should let it expire or give it to a group who actually wants to do something with it.

    • insickness 5 years ago

      This comment is the type of censorship-by-emotion thoughtlessness that makes people not want to support an advocacy group. There are a million other domain name options gay rights orgs can choose from. Use some creativity and come up with your own.

    • celticninja 5 years ago

      Why can't anyone register any domain? Obnoxious is a very strong term.

    • JakeWesorick 5 years ago

      Seems better then someone with worse motives registering it first.

  • WillYouFinish 5 years ago

    Make a subdomain "why" and put up the same content as on http://youare.gay/

  • kevin_thibedeau 5 years ago

    Find a copy of "Man of the Century" where this question is asked.

    https://youtu.be/_GGCVNoGs0M?t=71

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man_of_the_Century

  • ralusek 5 years ago

    Just have it run this

        function areYouGay() {
          const cached = localStorage.getItem('isGay');
          const isGay = (cached ?? false) ? Number(cached) : Math.random();
          localStorage.setItem('isGay', isGay);
          return (isGay < 0.5) ? 'Yes' : 'No';
        }
  • sonicggg 5 years ago

    Damn, people are quick. I did a couple of searches, and all the good ones are taken already. Probably most by squatters.

    How did your even find out about it? Do squatters have a newsletter on new domain sales or something?

  • athriren 5 years ago

    i like this idea. quick splash page with a nice faq and links out to organizations that help questioning people!

ffpip 5 years ago

I want to see whether Google will register google.gay

Will they sue me for registering it?

  • CydeWeys 5 years ago

    According to WHOIS, google.gay was registered on February 11th. (Rights-holders are allowed to get in early through the sunrise process to prevent exactly the kind of squatting you're hypothesizing, though not typically this early.)

        whois -h whois.nic.gay google.gay
        [...]
        Creation Date: 2020-02-11T15:41:12.0Z
  • gruez 5 years ago

    OTOH, you can probably get away with apple.gay, as long as you don't make your site too specific to apple computers.

  • chippy 5 years ago

    duckduck could be a nice domain

  • segfaultbuserr 5 years ago

    Yes. Google can enforce its trademark and take over the domain name.

bartvk 5 years ago

I'm not a native speaker; does gay unequivocally relates to romantic preference? Or can it also simply mean "joyful"?

  • 3pt14159 5 years ago

    Sometimes people will say "I'm having a gay ol' time" to mean "I'm having a good time" with a bit of a subversive tint to it, since they know that everyone knows that gay to mean happy is completely outdated. The vast majority of the time it means homosexual, even for women.

  • peteretep 5 years ago

    It can also be a given name and a surname. However, 99.9% of usage in English these days is sexual orientation related.

  • shultays 5 years ago

    It meant joyful at some point but now it mostly evolved into sexual orientation

  • C1sc0cat 5 years ago

    It did but not any more.

    There is a trope of retired Colonel writing to the Times bemoaning the of gay in its new form. <beat> in the 1960's

  • mmm_grayons 5 years ago

    There's still a distinct meani g of happy. For some reason, though, people are trying to stamp it out; I hardly hear it used in new writing.

    • CydeWeys 5 years ago

      It's not remotely as nefarious as that, it's just that language evolves over time and conflicting meanings that cause confusion tend to be weeded out.

    • pulse7 5 years ago

      "For some reason..." ...the reason is that today "it mostly evolved into sexual orientation" like another commenter said.

    • gilrain 5 years ago

      Interestingly, the adverb form is still mostly used in the joyful sense. "The weather cleared, and the people danced gaily."

alex_young 5 years ago

.gay sounds like a great way to champion gay rights for a given place or brand. I hope it will become a typical pattern and actually do some good in the world.

  • mytailorisrich 5 years ago

    In reality, and like most things these days, this will only promote more division and more identity politics.

rootbear 5 years ago

Just checked and yes, enola.gay is registered. That was inevitable, I suppose, if a bit regrettable. (Edited for clarity.)

mindfreezeOP 5 years ago

Official Website: https://www.ohhey.gay

  • CydeWeys 5 years ago

    You should add some context that this is the official promotional site for the TLD by the registry operator.

hehetrthrthrjn 5 years ago

If your name is Gay, iam.gay would be very cool. MAybe I'll change my name by deed poll.

mp3il 5 years ago

Someone should buy Haaaa.gay and just embed:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YaG5SAw1n0c

CydeWeys 5 years ago

Wow there's a lot of childish homophobia coming out in the comments here. I (naively?) thought that HN would be better than that for some reason?

  • dang 5 years ago

    I actually think there's a clear explanation for this: HN is much larger than it seems. There are millions of users. Every subgroup/tendency is going to be represented in a population sample that big, except for utterly obscure ones.

    Which subgroups/tendencies show up in the comments is therefore more a question of the particular thread: the title, the topic, and the early comments. If it seems like "HN would be better than $X", that's only because we mostly manage to avoid the stimuli that produce $X responses.

  • cuddlecake 5 years ago

    Thinking that HN would be better than <insert any bad behavior here> is a bit too hopeful of an assumption. Everyone is prone to bad / ignorant behavior. HN users being no exception.

    • CydeWeys 5 years ago

      I disagree. Some communities are actually much better than others on a variety of issues. I mistakenly thought that this was an issue HN would have been better and more mature on too, but I'm learning I was wrong about that.

      But compare your average 8chan poster to your average HN poster and you'll see that for sure not all online communities are the same.

      • cuddlecake 5 years ago

        I don't even know how to argue on this. The average HN poster is definitely better than the average 8chan poster.

        But that does not mean all HN posters are free of being hateful/discriminating against certain groups of people. Be it by accident or willfully.

        • CydeWeys 5 years ago

          I for sure never thought that all HN posters were free of hate/discrimination, I just thought they were better than we're seeing here. But I was proven wrong in that.

Simulacra 5 years ago

At last! What I've always wanted.

gruez 5 years ago

Before anyone gets any ideas:

>The use of .gay for anti-LGBTQ content or to malign or harm LGBTQ individuals or groups is strictly prohibited and can result in immediate server-hold. Prohibited behavior includes harassment, threats, and hate speech. For the complete policy, see: https://toplevel.design/policy

  • globular-toast 5 years ago

    Who makes these rules? Who decides what is "anti-LGBTQ"? Will they keep adding on more letters to LGBTQ as they become available?

    • spsful 5 years ago

      Firstly, the company overseeing the tld gets to make its own rules. For example, you'd have to go through Verisign at some point if you wanted a .com domain. Second, the only things encapsulated by the term LGBTQ are sexual orientation and gender identity, two innately connected concepts. People can add as many letters to the acronym as they want but it doesn't change anything about the movement or the group as a whole.

    • CydeWeys 5 years ago

      The registry operator does: https://toplevel.design/

    • buzzy_hacker 5 years ago

      One of these questions is not like the others

      • globular-toast 5 years ago

        The point of the "more letters" is probably not what you think, but rather what if the entity in charge decides to add a new one (say, X) but it turns out the L, the B and the T now feel alienated by the X? Or, conversely, what if they decide not to include some new group (say, P)? It just seems rather nebulous and down to the whims of some mysterious entity with unclear motives.

        • krapp 5 years ago

          What are you even on about?

          There is no "entity in charge" of the LGBT acronym, no central authority approving, adding or removing letters, or any particular concern over "alienation" from adding or removing letters. It's a cultural idiom, not an ISO standard.

          Regarding its "nebulous" nature and "motives," quoting from Wikipedia[0]:

              The initialism, as well as some of its common variants, have been adopted 
              into the mainstream as an umbrella term for use when labeling topics 
              pertaining to sexuality and gender identity.
          
              The initialism LGBT is intended to emphasize a diversity of sexuality and 
              gender identity-based cultures.
          
          Note that, while the quote mentions "LGBT" specifically that description also applies to the "common variants" also described, including LGBTQ, LGBTQIA, and others mentioned elsewhere in the article. I only point that out because one of your flagged comments mentions how alienated and confused you are by "the whole gay thing," so I wanted to be as clear as possible.

          And if you're instead talking about the registrar, they're not a mysterious entity, and their motives are clearly spelled out on their policy page[1].

          [0]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGBT

          [1]https://toplevel.design/policy

          • globular-toast 5 years ago

            Erm... I'm talking about the entity in charge of the TLD.

            • krapp 5 years ago

              I still don't understand what exactly your concern is. The TLD doesn't even contain any elements of the LGBT acronym, yet you seem deeply concerned about them altering it willy nilly and this having some widespread negative effect on the gay community.

              This despite going through the unnecessary effort of making an entire, completely off topic top level comment announcing how confused and alienated you were by the gay community and how you wish they would just stop being so visible so you didn't have to think about gay sex all the time.

              I mean, I'm sure the gay community appreciates your concern and apologizes for the inconvenience, but it seems like you're trying very hard to start a tempest in teacup without even any tea to stir. Don't worry, the gays will be fine.

              Now relax and enjoy some Scissor Sisters: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HHv0jW4p_xA

    • mytailorisrich 5 years ago

      These days this is gauged by the level of social media outrage, this is what brings 'problems' to the attention of decision-makers, and I suspect that this rule will mostly be used as a response to that unless the domain name itself is obviously disparaging.

  • tobilocker 5 years ago

    I did not expect that people here would have needed that reminder to not come up with "funny" ideas

  • ortusdux 5 years ago

    Enforcement of this will be ... interesting. Is labeling someone gay considered hate speech? Would buying 'famous person'.gay and having it display the word 'yes' be considered defamation?

pixelpoet 5 years ago

nvidia.gay is up for grabs at 2k euros. I wonder if they'd buy it off you.

rimliu 5 years ago

How about .straight and .bisexual?

numpad0 5 years ago

hxxp://ni.men.gay/wo?na-gar

ffpip 5 years ago

https://read.if-you-are.gay

nazgulsenpai 5 years ago

Why is it .gay and not .lgbt? Seems like the latter would be more inclusive.

  • brentm 5 years ago

    The company that runs it also does other domains like .art, .blog, .design, .group, .ink, .llc, .photography, .style and .wiki.

    I'd say they just picked the most generic thing that they thought would make the most money.

  • Simulacra 5 years ago

    Why not .lesbian? .transgender?

  • thiht 5 years ago

    .lgbt already exists (afilias)

  • jbob2000 5 years ago

    Many in the LGBT community feel that the acronym does not accurately capture their identity. LGBTQIA+ is the currently acceptable acronym to use, so you can see how the use of .lgbt would be "harmful". Also, you can't have a + symbol in a TLD, which would also be considered "harmful" should it ever be up for implementation.

    All in all, the use of gTLD names to reinforce identity is stupid. .com and .org mean company and organization. It's the words before those letters that define the type of company or organization you are, that's where your identity is supposed to lie.

mmm_grayons 5 years ago

Sadly, thatsso.gay is akready taken. That would have been a really funny domain to have.

  • glckr 5 years ago

    Why?

    • mmm_grayons 5 years ago

      Because it's generally recognized that calling something gay is funny and a way to insult it, at least here in America. Is that not the case in other places? I've heard at least some of it in south and central america, though it tends to be taken more personally there than in

mytailorisrich 5 years ago

This opens the flood gates for TLDs for every community under the sun (as long as it is PC, of course). There is gold at the end of the rainbow... But really this trend of multiplying TLDs ad infinitum has been going on for years because it's free money.

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