.to
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Introduced | 1995 |
---|---|
TLD type | Country code top-level domain |
Status | Active |
Registry | Tonga Network Information Center (Tonic) |
Sponsoring organization | Government of Tonga |
Intended use | Entities connected with Tonga |
Actual use | Used for a varied assortment of sites, few related to Tonga; some connected with Toronto |
Registration restrictions | None |
Structure | Registrations permitted at second level; some Tonga-related entities have domains at third level under labels like .gov.to |
Documents | FAQ |
Dispute policies | Some trademarked names reserved; no other dispute policy |
Web site | Tonic |
.to is the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) of the island kingdom of Tonga.
The government of Tonga sells domains in its ccTLD to any interested party. Because to is a useful English preposition, it became popular to craft memorable URLs called domain hacks that take advantage of this, such as (bogus example) http://look.to/wikipedia or Refused's page.to/come.
The .to ccTLD is administered by the Tonga Network Information Center (Tonic).
The city of Toronto, in Ontario, Canada, has TO (pronounced Tee-O) as its nickname. Therefore, the .to extension is used by many small businesses located in Toronto, despite Canada's own .ca.
As the .to domains are to be paid for, all normal DNS operations are possible and no advertisements are forced upon you. Some domains are free, like .edu.to, but only to real Tongan schools, courtesy tonic. At this moment businesses registered in Tonga can also get free domains. People who sell on .to domains can claim a bonus.
.to is one of few ccTLD that (officially) does not maintain a (public) whois database providing registrant information [1].