Country code second-level ___domain: Difference between revisions

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Many country code ___domain registries implement ___domain name classes at the second level underneath their ccTLD, such as are present in the original generic [[top-level ___domain]]s <tt>com</tt>, <tt>net</tt>, and <tt>org</tt>, which were intended for commercial entities, network operators, and non-profit organizations, respectively.
 
Many countries implement additional classes. For example, the [[United Kingdom]] ([[.uk|uk]]) uses <tt>[[.co (second-level ___domain).uk|co.uk]]</tt> for commercial purposes and <tt>[[.ac (second-level ___domain).uk|ac.uk]]</tt> for academic registrants.
 
Brazil ([[.br|br]]) has a high number of restricted second-level domains, as of 2011<ref>[http://registro.br/info/dpn.html Registro.br] 4 February 2011</ref> amounting to 67; they range from <tt>com.br</tt> for commercial activities, <tt>vet.br</tt> for veterinarians, to <tt>wiki.br</tt> for wikis.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://registro.br/info/dpn.html|title=Registro.br|author=|date=|publisher=|accessdate=5 October 2016}}</ref>