Fat Fingers, Cameroon's Latest Natural Resource
from the vowels-are-so-web-1.0 dept
Not to be outdone by its Nigerian neighbors, Cameroon has come up with a new way to make some money off the Net. Blessed with a fortunate top-level domain, .cm, the Cameroon registry redirects any unregistered .cm domain to a page full of ads, resulting in a slew of accusations of typo-squatting. Typosquatting is becoming quite popular lately, but this is the first instance of an entire top-level domain qualifying as typosquatting. It's not, however, the first time a country has tried to capitalize on a fortunate top-level domain assignment. So, what to do? OpenDNS announced that its DNS service would allow users to filter out the .cm domain, which would then allow the typo-correction service that OpenDNS offers to kick in. Typo correction for registered domains is a slippery slope, so OpenDNS is approaching this with caution. Then again, OpenDNS makes money off ads on its error pages, so that's money that might have gone to Cameroon. Ultimately, the winner of all of this jockeyingThank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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like the google ads...
First!
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Non Sequitur
Guess what? I hadn't.
That google displays ads in exchange for its free services has absolutely nothing to do with a typo-squatting nation, and slightly less to do with a company that can redirect DNS entries to that nation's websites.
C'mon, techdirt. You're better than that. That was just a stupid attempt at a pithy comment.
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Re: Non Sequitur
Sorry for any confusion.
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no google ads on .cm
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As for as it goes, member, Techdirt likes to take a Jab at everybody because somehow they figured it all out while nobody else did.
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Well actually...
Oh, and Overture is running the ads on the wildcard page, not google. The internet ad world is fierce and as you see above, people get pedantic pretty frickin' quick. You're right though, Google and Overture kind of make the money no matter what.
-david
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Btw, GoDaddy is their biggest network for DomainSense ;)
Unfortunately DomainSense makes sense only to domains, very little to users and even less to advertisers...
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