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The Most Dangerous Addresses On the Web?


Those two or three letters that go after the dot on a Web address -- you know, .com, .gov, .edu, and so on -- actually mean something. They identify the top level domain (TLD) that a site is on. It would seem that pretty much all those TLDs are more or less the same, but it looks like some domains harbor more malicious sites than others, according to a new report by security software vendor McAfee.

The most common top-level domain is .com, which has just over 5-percent malicious sites (sites that are used for spamming, hacking, phishing, and virus-spreading). Other domains contain significantly higher percentages of dangerous sites: 19.2 percent of .hk (Hong Kong) sites were found to be dangerous, while just under 12 percent of .cn (China) and .info (Information) sites were.

Primarily, this has to do with the rules governing the domains and the lack of proper security checks by some of the companies that that administer TLDs and let people register Web addresses with them. One analyst at McAfee suggests avoiding .hk, .cn, and .info sites... especially those hawking pharmaceuticals.

The safest domain by far was .gov, which McAfee found only .05 percent of to be dangerous. So until more international hackers infiltrate US government Web sites, you should be okay visiting most anything with a .gov in the address. [Source: AOL News/AP and Newsvine]

The 100 Oldest Internet Domains

If you're younger than 20, you might be surprised to learn that many Web site addresses are older than you are (actually, at that age, you probably think the Web has been around forever). But for those of us who can remember the days before the World Wide Web existed, the revelation is a shocker. Many of us still think the World Wide Web, as a late-'90s phenomenon, but the Internet's domains (the part that comes after the "www." on, say, a Web address) actually date back much further.

We can thank this bit of information to Life & Times blog, which has compiled a list of the 100 oldest domains on the Internet. The oldest domain on the Internet is Symbolics, a computer manufacturer that registered Symbolics.com on March 15 of 1985. Defense contractor Northrop secured Northrop.com in November of the same year, with Xerox grabbing Xerox.com in January of 1986. Just six domains were registered in 85, but a comparatively huge 55 were registered in 86. The rest, of course, is history.

Reading through the list of aged domains is enough to make a grizzled old IT guy misty-eyed at names like DEC.com and Tandy.com, which are sites for companies that no longer exist. But the real shocker is how many of today's biggest tech names don't appear on the list. Microsoft, for example, didn't register its domain until 1991. Computer maker Dell -- originally known as PCs Unlimited -- didn't become "Dell" until 1988, so it's not on the list. And, of course, modern search power-houses like Yahoo! and Google didn't come into being until the mid- and late-'90s, respectively.

Meanwhile, Apple.com doesn't appear until the number 64 spot (February of 1987). Interestingly, 1987 is the same year that year Apple produced a video on what it thought computing in 2010 would be like. While the shape and design is obviously different, and you don't see too many talking bow-tied and schedule-minded avatars, the company's vision wasn't too far off on what we can do with our computers today.

One thing Apple didn't realize or predict in this video, however, is just how valuable Apple.com would eventually become.

From Life & Times

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