Hosting multiple TLDs

Herb Stein herb at herbstein.com
Tue Aug 26 03:48:30 UTC 2003


"Michele Chubirka" <chubirka at gwu.edu> wrote in message
news:bidq26$ru$1 at sf1.isc.org...
> Yeah, I know it was a stupid question, but other members of our staff
> brought up the issue. I laughed and said "isn't that how DNS is SUPPOSED
> to work?! Why would there be such a prohibition?" I even called
> Educause, just to make these people shut up.


Barry is right. I host all kinds of .org, .net, .com sites.
As long as you control DNS, you rule!

> -----Original Message-----
> From: bind-users-bounce at isc.org [mailto:bind-users-bounce at isc.org] On
> Behalf Of Barry Margolin
> Sent: Monday, August 25, 2003 2:52 PM
> To: comp-protocols-dns-bind at isc.org
> Subject: Re: Hosting multiple TLDs
>
>
> In article <bidivv$2t4t$1 at sf1.isc.org>,
> Michele Chubirka <chubirka at gwu.edu> wrote:
> >Yup, that's actually what I meant. Sorry. So is there a problem with
> hosting
> >multiple 2nd-level domains, combining .edu's and .org's? is there some
> rule
> >against it?
>
> Never heard of such a prohibition.  We about 100 .edu domains and
> thousands
> of .com and .org domains.  Many of our university customers host their
> own
> ..edu DNS, and quite a few also host .com and .org domains.
>
> For instance, Amherst College hosts both fivecolleges.edu and
> fivecolleges.org.
>
> -- 
> Barry Margolin, barry.margolin at level3.com
> Level(3), Woburn, MA
> *** DON'T SEND TECHNICAL QUESTIONS DIRECTLY TO ME, post them to
> newsgroups.
> Please DON'T copy followups to me -- I'll assume it wasn't posted to the
> group.
>
>




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