Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
nameserver .
Etymologies
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Examples
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Thanks, Pedro the domain name nameservers will take 2 days to get propagated. just wait!!!
Digital Point Forums PedroG 2010
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Thanks, Pedro the domain name nameservers will take 2 days to get propagated. just wait!!!
Digital Point Forums 2010
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Alex Norcliffe, a software engineer with Umbraco, said that the changes meant "the domain names are totally out of control of the owners until they can get the registrar to change them back to their own nameservers."
Turkish hacker group diverts users away from high-profile websites 2011
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"Of the five root nameservers for the .ly TLD: two are based in Oregon, one is in the Netherlands and two are in Libya."
Libya shutdown raises questions about bit.ly, security of foreign domains 2011
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"Of the five root nameservers for the .ly TLD: two are based in Oregon, one is in the Netherlands and two are in Libya."
Faster Forward: Libya shutdown raises questions about bit.ly, security of foreign domains 2011
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And then go about the lengthy process of merging accounts and shifting nameservers and getting the site back up.
All of my artist friends *must* do this. ellen_kushner 2009
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(This structure is largely lifted even for these calls today -- despite ITU "jurisdiction" -- because of US leadership.) The later fight at WSIS involved the Domain Name System, primarily country codes (like .us,. ca, and. cn but not. com), and the control the US government has over the Internet root nameservers -- something that is unrelated both to settlement rates and to the FCC reclassification and open Internet policies.
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(This structure is largely lifted even for these calls today -- despite ITU "jurisdiction" -- because of US leadership.) The later fight at WSIS involved the Domain Name System, primarily country codes (like .us,. ca, and. cn but not. com), and the control the US government has over the Internet root nameservers -- something that is unrelated both to settlement rates and to the FCC reclassification and open Internet policies.
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There may be short downtimes of the site or of the email associated with this blog as I futz around with nameservers and cnames and such.
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Adding digits to the mix (note that I'm intentionally ignoring obtuse dashes for such short domain names, though technically they are legal from the second character onwards), giving 46,656 permutations, yields a larger number of garbage domain entries (either REGISTRAR-LOCKED, REDEMPTIONPERIOD, or with no nameservers), giving a false hope of 228 seemingly open domains, yet they aren't actually available.
Archive 2006-04-01 Ben Barren 2006
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