I get that some instances use the domain + TLD to make a word, like lemm.ee or to an extent, sh.itjust.works. But I’ve seen so many TLDs I had no idea existed, like .world, .zone, .social, and yes .works as well.

Is there any real reason for that? Trying to look cool or kinda underground-y? Cheaper and more varied domain options? Something actually kinda functional?

Interestingly, I started on vlemmy.net because I was a scared Reddit refugee and the .net TLD gave me comfort. Then it vanished a few days later without a trace. So here I am on lemmy.world

  • @Vlyn@lemmy.zip
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    31 year ago

    It really doesn’t matter in my opinion.

    If you get an email and there is a link that just says “myfile.zip”, you wouldn’t click it, right? Email doesn’t support links for attachments, so it would be a web link either way. And behind that link it can be whatever, like “https://malicioussite.com/download/virus”. Actual email attachments have their own spot in your email client.

    On top of that, any URL can download a file. If you go to https://fakegoogle.com it doesn’t even have to be .zip or .jpg, the moment you get there I could start a download in your browser.

    • Echo Dot
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      1 year ago

      No it’s not that URL will download a file it’s that a URL can pretend to be a file download.

      Then all I need to do is build a website that looks like a word or something, and ask users to fill out their personal address form or something.

      It’s about the lowest common denominator, and the public are the very most common denominator. Why make life easier for scammers?

      It’s not like there’s a legitimate reason for a .zip domain

      • @Vlyn@lemmy.zip
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        41 year ago

        No it’s not that URL will download a file it’s that a URL can pretend to be a file download.

        Every URL can pretend to be a file download…

        I can give you https://mydomain.com/photo.jpg and then deliver you a webpage instead of a .jpg file. The web server decides what you get in return.