They are called Handshake domains. I think Namecheap sells them as well. But for now you can only access them by changing your DNS server or using a browser extension.
I don’t think any normal browser has plans to incorporate any crypto related domains. Brave comes closest with its native .onion support, but even that doesn’t seem to be interest implementing these alternate roots.
Like other blockchain competitors and the OpenNIC DNS system that preceded them decades earlier, these domains are practically useless. As far as I can tell, practically nobody is running these alternate DNS servers on federated servers, so a Lemmy domain on such hosts would be isolated from the rest of the network.
I’m surprised Namecheap and Porkbun even dare sell these, though they do come with the necessary warnings at least. I would not want to be the customer support agent that needs to answer the phone after customers find out their domains aren’t reachable by anyone who hasn’t installed a special extension.
I don’t think any normal browser has plans to incorporate any crypto related domains. Brave comes closest with its native .onion support, but even that doesn’t seem to be interest implementing these alternate roots.
As far as I can tell, practically nobody is running these alternate DNS servers on federated servers, so a Lemmy domain on such hosts would be isolated from the rest of the network.
Yes, currently these domains are useless. A Lemmy instance on such a domain would only work if both servers and browsers support the Handshake protocol natively (without changing your DNS server and stuff). But maybe this will change in the future. Personally I think it would be cool to be able to come up with your own TLDs.
I’m surprised Namecheap and Porkbun even dare sell these, though they do come with the necessary warnings at least.
I was just as surprised as you! I was actually looking for a “.ks” domain last week because I had the same idea, and then I saw that Namecheap had it, only to find out it was a Handshake domain.
.ks only exists on some kind of blockchain, it’s not a real TLD.
They are called Handshake domains. I think Namecheap sells them as well. But for now you can only access them by changing your DNS server or using a browser extension.
I don’t think any normal browser has plans to incorporate any crypto related domains. Brave comes closest with its native .onion support, but even that doesn’t seem to be interest implementing these alternate roots.
Like other blockchain competitors and the OpenNIC DNS system that preceded them decades earlier, these domains are practically useless. As far as I can tell, practically nobody is running these alternate DNS servers on federated servers, so a Lemmy domain on such hosts would be isolated from the rest of the network.
I’m surprised Namecheap and Porkbun even dare sell these, though they do come with the necessary warnings at least. I would not want to be the customer support agent that needs to answer the phone after customers find out their domains aren’t reachable by anyone who hasn’t installed a special extension.
Apparently Opera has support for it, but I don’t use/like Opera so I can’t confirm.
Yes, currently these domains are useless. A Lemmy instance on such a domain would only work if both servers and browsers support the Handshake protocol natively (without changing your DNS server and stuff). But maybe this will change in the future. Personally I think it would be cool to be able to come up with your own TLDs.
I was just as surprised as you! I was actually looking for a “.ks” domain last week because I had the same idea, and then I saw that Namecheap had it, only to find out it was a Handshake domain.