
Help | FAQs | Glossary
This glossary is a compilation of various terms used within the Cheap Domains web site. If a term is used and is not listed here, please feel free to email us.
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Accredited Registrar
A Registrar that has been accredited by auDA as meeting certain minimum criteria to act as a Registrar for a specific 2LD.
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Administrative Contact
The administrative contact is an individual, role or organisation authorized to interact with the registry or registrar on behalf of the Domain Holder. The administrative contact should be able to answer non-technical questions about the domain name's registration and the 2LD Holder. In all cases, the Administrative Contact is viewed as the authoritative point of contact for the domain name, second only to the Registrant. The Administrative contact is a required contact within a valid domain registration.
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auDA
.au Domain Administration Ltd auDA is the manager of the .au domain, and independent regulatory body for the Australian domain name industry. auDA is responsible for ensuring that the .au domain operates for the benefit of the entire Australian Internet community.
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Billing Contact
The billing contact is the individual, role or organisation designated to receive the invoice for domain name registration and re-registration fees.
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Contact
Contacts are individuals or entities associated with domain name records. Typically, third parties with specific inquiries or concerns will use contact records to determine who should act upon specific issues related to a domain name record. There are typically three of these contact types associated with a domain name record, the Administrative contact, the Billing contact and the Technical contact.
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Country Code Top Level Domain (ccTLD)
ccTLD's represent the TLD's used by Countries in the world, they account for about 250 of the 260 TLD's. Some examples of ccTLDs are '.uk' for the United Kingdom, and '.au' for Australia.
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D
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DNS
See Domain Name System.
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Domain Holder
See Registrant.
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Domain Name
An addressing construct used for identifying and locating computers on the Internet. Domain names provide a system of easy-to-remember Internet addresses, which can be translated by the Domain Name System (DNS) into the numeric addresses (Internet Protocol (IP) numbers) used by the network.
A domain name is hierarchical and often conveys information about the type of entity using the domain name. A domain name is simply a label that represents a domain, which is a subset of the total domain name space.
Domain names at the same level of the hierarchy must be unique. Thus, for example, there can be only one .COM at the top-level of the hierarchy, and only one ausregistry.com at the next level of the hierarchy.
A valid domain name registered with Cheap Domains must:
- be from 2 to 63 characters long in the 3LD
- only use the characters a-z, A-Z, 0-9, and "-" (the hyphen)
- not have a hyphen in the 3rd or 4th character position in the 3LD
- be a valid domain type.
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Domain Name System
The DNS is the hierarchical system by which easy-to-remember, human-friendly names like "yahoo.com" are associated with Internet locations.
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Domain Types offered by Cheap Domains
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PURPOSE |
| asn.au |
For 'associations'. Includes associations incorporated under specific state legislation, some incorporated bodies, political parties, trade unions, sporting and special interest clubs and 'partnerships' between disparate organisations. |
| com.au |
For commercial purposes. Includes commercial entities, currently registered and trading in Australia, as well as commercial products and services. |
| id.au |
For individuals |
| net.au |
For commercial purposes. Includes commercial entities, currently registered and trading in Australia, as well as commercial products and services. |
| org.au |
For non-commercial purposes. Includes not-for-proft organisations, charities, churches, welfare groups etc. |
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G
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Generic Top Level Domain (gTLD)
A top level domain name that is open to registrants around the world in contrast to country code top level domains that are often restricted to registrants located in a particular country or region. .com, .net and .org are all generic top level domains.
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H
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Host
Also called a name server. A computer that has both the software and the data (zone files) needed to resolve domain names to Internet Protocol (IP) numbers.
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I
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Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN)
The non-profit organisation that officially coordinates the technical management of the Internet's domain name system. It was founded to assume responsibility for items such as IP address space assignment, protocol parameter assignment, domain name system management, and root server system management. http://www.icann.org/.
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Internet Protocol (IP)
The communications protocol underlying the Internet, IP allows large, geographically-diverse networks of computers to communicate with each other quickly and economically over a variety of physical links.
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IP Address
An Internet Protocol Address is the numerical address by which a location in the Internet is identified. Computers on the Internet use IP addresses to route traffic and establish connections among themselves; people generally use the human-friendly names made possible by the Domain Name System.
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Name Server
See Host.
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Name Service
Providing individuals or organisations with domain name-to-Internet
Protocol (IP) number resolution by maintaining and making
available the hardware, software, and data needed to
perform this function. Many Internet Service Providers
(ISPs) operate name servers and provide their customers
with name service when they register a domain name.
Most individuals are not in a position to operate a
name server on their own and will need to make arrangements
for name service with an ISP or some other person or
organisation.
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O
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Operational Test and Evaluation (OT&E)
A process in which accredited registrars develop client systems
and software to register and manage domain names and
name servers prior to live operation in the Shared Registration
System. The Shared Registration System includes an isolated,
shared Operational Test and Evaluation server environment
that is used for both initial registrar system development
and ongoing registrar development and testing.
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Optimize / Optimization
A page is said to be optimized when it has been structured in
such a way that it ranks well for those keywords it
targets. It is a fairly subjective concept. What some
see as optimisation might be termed spamdexing by others.
In the strictest sense, optimisation means simply making
a page spider-friendly.
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R
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Registrant (webname license holder)
The individual or organisation that registers a specific domain name.
This individual or organisation holds the right to use
that specific domain name for a specified period of
time, provided certain conditions are met and the registration
fees are paid. This person or organisation is the "legal
entity" bound by the terms of the relevant service agreement
with the registry operator for the TLD in question.
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Registrar (retailer of webnames)
A person or entity that, via contract with Registrants
and a Registry, provides front-end domain name registration
services to registrants. These services form the public
interface to registry services. As the reader of this
document you are most likely to be a budding or active
registrar for the Australian Registry. Registrars may
be providing registration services for names from one
or more 2LD's within Australia or a multiple of TLD's
around the world.
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Registry (wholesale provider)
Has the exclusive responsibly for maintainence of a centralised
registry for its particular TLD. AusRegistry maintains
the Root Name Servers for these 2LD's in Australia.
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Registry Registrar Protocol
A protocol for the registration and management of second
level domain names and associated name servers in both
Top Level Domains (TLDs) and country code Top Level
Domains (ccTLDs). Also see EPP.
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Registry Whois
Whois services made available by specific registries for the domain names that they are authoritative for.
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Resolve
The term used to describe the process by which domain names are matched
with corresponding Internet Protocol (IP) numbers. "Resolution
is accomplished by a combination of computers and software,
referred to as name servers that use the data in the
Domain Name System to determine which IP numbers correspond
to a particular domain name.
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Root Server
A machine that has the software and data needed to locate name
servers that contain authoritative data for the top-level
domains (e.g., root servers know which name servers
contain authoritative data for com, net, fr, UK etc.).
The root servers are, in fact, name servers and contain
authoritative data for the very top of the Domain Name
System (DNS) hierarchy. Currently, technical specifications
limit the number of root servers to 13. These machines
are currently located around the globe, in the U.S.,
the UK, Sweden, and Japan.
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Second Level Domain (2LD)
The alphanumeric string before the dot and the TLD.
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Shared Registration System (SRS)
A domain name registration system in which registry services are shared
among multiple independent registrars. The AusRegistry
SRS enables Cheap Domains to connect to the central Australian
internet registry.
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Sponsoring Registrar
The Registrar responsible for the submission of the domain name to the Registry.
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SSL
SSL is an acronym for "Secure Socket Layer", a security protocol
that provides communications privacy over the Internet.
The protocol allows client/server applications to communicate
in a way that is designed to prevent eavesdropping,
tampering, or message forgery.
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T
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Technical Contact
The technical contact is the individual, role or organisation who
is responsible for the technical operations of the delegated
zone. This contact likely maintains the domain name
server(s) for the domain. The technical contact should
be able to answer technical questions about the domain
name, the delegated zone and work with technically oriented
people in other zones to solve technical problems that
affect the domain name and/or zone.
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Third Level Domain (3LD)
The alphabetic string before the dot and the 2LD. Between 2 and 63 characters long, this is the 'yahoo' in yahoo.com.au.
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TLD Zone
A file that contains data describing a portion of the domain name
space for a specific top-level domain. Zone files contain
the information needed to resolve domain names to Internet
Protocol (IP) numbers. Zone files contain domain names,
their associated name server names and the IP addresses
for those name servers.
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Top Level Domain (TLD)
Superset of gTLD's and ccTLDs. Every domain name must end with a TLD. Australian domains
all have the TLD, which is a ccTLD, which is .au. TLDs
are the names at the top of the DNS naming hierarchy.
They appear in domain names as the string of letters
following the last (rightmost) ".", such as "net" in
"www.example.net". The administrator for a TLD controls
what second-level names are recognised in that TLD.
The administrators of the "root domain" or "root zone"
control what TLDs are recognized by the DNS. Commonly
used TLDs include .com, .net, .edu, .jp, .de, etc.
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Trademark
A name, symbol, or other device identifying a product, officially registered and legally restricted to the use of the owner or manufacturer.
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W
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Web-based Whois
A World Wide Web interface to Whois services.
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Web Name
See Domain Name.
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Whois
A TCP transaction based query/response server, that provides a netwide
directory service to network users. This can be used
to determine if domain names (webnames) are registered
and by whom. More complex queries can result in multiple
results showing lists of domains registered to specific
entities or residing on specified host machines.
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Whois Server
The application server providing the Whois service.
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