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Comment by prmoustache

15 hours ago

> You can assume that .com is American unless otherwise

Why?

Because the internet was invented in America so it's the only country where a country suffix was never used from the start of its popularity.

I'm not saying this is good or bad or justified or not, just saying what the conventions are.

  • > Because the internet was invented in America

    And the web by a Brit working in Switzerland. It all runs on Chinese hardware with software written by people (and their dogs) from every nation on earth.

    The point, if there is one, is buried in the details.

  • But there have never been a convention that .com was reserved to the US market.

    co.uk, com.au, com.mx, com.my and co.jp exist for example, but I have never heard of a co.fr, com.it or co.de or org.dk

    Bottom line: there is no real convention

  • Honestly, unless you're going to say you're confused about .net and .io TLDs this comes across as willfully weaponised naivety.

  • > Because the internet was invented in America so it's the only country where a country suffix was never used from the start of its popularity.

    I expect some countries like the UK and Australia to use something like `co.uk`. I expect many countries to use their own top-level domain. I do not assume that some `.com` website is American.

    Is “the only” based on experience? How many websites from how many countries have you come across?

    > I'm not saying this is good or bad or justified or not, just saying what the conventions are.

    Do people associate `.com` with “company”? Or just “regular website”? Are people even stopped from making a `.com` if they don’t have a “company”?

    https://www.paiste.com/

    Is this Swiss business allowed to use `.com` because they have offices in the US of A?