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Our pledge
We'll never raise money. We'll never get acquired. We'll never shut down.
In fact, we don't even take salaries. All proceeds go directly to sustaining Posthaven for the next 100+ years.
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If we can't charge your card, your site goes into read only mode. Even if something catastrophic happens, your content will remain online.
a plan designed exclusively for those seeking the ultimate in security and longevity for their digital presence.
Safeguard your online legacy with the 100-Year Plan. This brand-new offering is for:
- Families who wish to preserve their digital assets—the stories, photos, sounds, and videos that make up their rich family history—for generations to come.
- Founders who want to protect and document their company’s past, present, and future.
- Individuals seeking a stable, flexible, and customized online home that can adapt to whatever changes the future of technology will bring. //
The 100-Year Plan isn’t just about today. It’s an investment in tomorrow. Whether you’re cementing your own digital legacy or gifting 100 years of a trusted platform to a loved one, this plan is a testament to the future’s boundless potential.
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Dealing with your digital legacy after your death is a big issue, and one that requires a lot of thought and a lot of problems to be solved, so let’s break it down into smaller pieces and think about them individually. This post is primarily a collection of thoughts about dealing with the problem from the domains side, not hosting. Hosting is a problem for more posts.
The internet isn’t that old and most of the pioneers are still around. But we can see the wave coming, so let’s try to solve this problem before it breaks.
ICANN has picked the TLD string that it will recommend for safe use behind corporate firewalls on the basis that it will never, ever be delegated.
The string is .internal, and the choice is now open for public comment.
It’s being called a “private use” TLD. Organizations would be able to use it behind their firewalls safe in the knowledge that it will never appear in the public DNS, mitigating the risk of public/private name collisions and data leakage.
.internal beat fellow short-lister .private to ICANN’s selection because it was felt that .private might lure people into a false sense of security.
While it’s unlikely that anyone was planning to apply for .internal as a commercial or brand gTLD in future, it’s important to note that when it makes it to the ICANN reserved list all confusingly similar strings will also be banned, un
French registrar Gandi will be the beneficiary of Freenom’s ignominious collapse last year, it has emerged.
ICANN records updated today show that Freenom’s gTLD domains will be transferred to Gandi following the termination of Freenom’s Registrar Accreditation Agreement last November.
Freenom, legally OpenTLD, had been ignoring customers transfer and renewal requests, leading to domains being lost, according to ICANN Compliance, which flicked the off switch after three rapid-fire breach notices.
Freenom had just 14,546 gTLD domains under management at the end of September, mostly in .com and .net, down quite a lot from its October 2019 peak of 44,774.
Despite having a population of just 1,400, until recently, Tokelau’s .tk domain had more users than any other country. Here’s why.