Probably a silly question but the .uk domain is really cheap. If I’m not in the UK can I still use that domain for my server without issue?
Its like 50 bucks for a ten year lease
Yep, it’s fine.
Also, the registration and hosting are separate. You can register your domain with the tld registrar and host with any company you want. Or at least I don’t know any registrars that make you host with them.
(Though some domains like .com have a bunch of registrars because of the sheer volume, and for those it’s often cheaper and more reliable to find a trustworthy company to handle both.)
Just make sure there’s no wacky rules to follow on .uk Last I bought a domain, .us was the cheapest, but it had no WHOIS privacy and you were required to prove you were a US Citizen or company to buy it??? I noped right out
I did not have to do that with my domain.
Yeah. I just needed to provide a US-based mailing address.
Probably differs with each registry
It doesn’t really matter, no. All the DNS entries sync everywhere. So it isn’t like you will have to ping some DNS server in the UK to get your website. Everyone will just hitup their normal DNS server and it will have the answer.
I think country TLDs don’t have WHOIS privacy protection if you care about that.
That’s usually determined at the registrar level, not the registry level, though of course there are always exceptions.
Depends on the country
Totally fine. The only issue could come from legal implications since the domain registrations are managed by different organisations in different countries (leading to your registration data being an open book with .net domains but most likely unavailable with .nexus). However unless you’re silly enough to host a very gay social media instance using the TLD from god damn Afghanistan you’re probably fine (yes, that happened).
(yes, that happened).
What was the site? With .af I bet it was a fun name
Oof
A great domain name, too
I looked up the .ai TLD on Wikipedia and
.ai is the Internet country code top-level domain for Anguilla, a British Overseas Territory in the Caribbean.
Things will get interesting if the folks over there decide it’s time to make extra money
Some ccTLDs have strict requirements (looking at you .de), but most are fairly standard TLDs. The last time I checked, .tv (for Tuvalu) was responsible for something like 40% of the country’s GDP, so it’s not surprising that most ccTLDs are welcoming to outsiders.
What’s up with de domains?
Ridiculous.
They don’t mess around with their requirements either and strictly enforce them. If you don’t follow their rules and your domain is deleted, there is no refund or recourse.
Normally it doesn’t matter. The only restrictions is in terms of who can buy domai s of that cou try to begin with (some cou tries have restrictions on that), and what sort of content is allowed in such domains. Other than that, it’s OK.
I got cc for my domain, because it was cheap and easy to remember. Though technically it’s for the Cocos Keeling islands :P
As long as it’s not critical to you if you lose the domain I would say go for it because you have to remember that with country domains the country has control over it and can always take it away from you.
Not an answer to your question, but I have
.bizdomains cuz they are cheap. Also OVH have a.ovhthat was about £1I’d say don’t risk it if you’re not based in the UK.
I have a .uk domain and had to provide proof of residence or something to nominet. I can’t remember the exact process now, but they did temporarily suspend my domain (without warning) until I contacted them.
I have an UK domain for years and I am not even close to it.
CC TLDs usually ask for proof of residence.
Depends on the country. .tv and .io don’t, though I know .io is shifting to disallow it
The
.ioTLD that tech startups love to use is assigned to the British Indian Ocean Territory.It’s going to be retired though, unless something changes. All io domains will disappear.
It’s generally safer to stick to 3 or more letter domains since those aren’t tied to countries.








