Administration
The right to use a domain name is
delegated by domain name registrars,
which are accredited by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers
(ICANN), the organization charged with overseeing the name and number systems
of the Internet. In addition to ICANN, each top-level domain (TLD) is
maintained and serviced technically by an administrative organization operating
a registry. A registry is responsible for maintaining the database of names
registered within the TLD it administers. The registry receives registration
information from each domain name registrar authorized to assign names in the
corresponding TLD and publishes the information using a special service, the WHOIS
protocol.
Registries and registrars usually
charge an annual fee for the service of delegating a domain name to a user and
providing a default set of name servers. Often, this transaction is termed a
sale or lease of the domain name, and the registrant may sometimes be called an
"owner", but no such legal relationship is actually associated with
the transaction, only the exclusive right to use the domain name. More
correctly, authorized users are known as "registrants" or as
"domain holders".
ICANN
publishes the complete list of TLD registries and domain name registrars.
Registrant information associated with domain names is maintained in an online
database accessible with the WHOIS protocol.
For most of the 250 country code
top-level domains (ccTLDs), the domain registries maintain the WHOIS
(Registrant, name servers, expiration dates, etc.) information.
Some domain name registries, often
called network information centers (NIC), also function as registrars to
end-users. The major generic top-level domain registries, such as for the com,
net, org, info domains and others, use a
registry-registrar model consisting of hundreds of domain name registrars (see
lists at ICANN[21] or VeriSign).In this method of management, the
registry only manages the domain name database and the relationship with the
registrars. The registrants (users of a domain name) are customers of
the registrar, in some cases through additional layers of resellers.
There are also a few other alternative DNS root
providers that tries to compete or complement ICANN's role of domain name
administration, however, most of them failed to receive wide recognition, and
thus domain names offered by those alternative roots cannot be used universally
on most other internet-connecting machines without additional dedicated
configurations.
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