Harman Patil (Editor)

OpenNIC

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Website
  
www.opennicproject.org

OpenNIC

Founded
  
June 1, 2000; 16 years ago (2000-06-01)

Purpose
  
Provides a non-national alternative to the traditional Top-Level Domain registries. OpenNIC is a user owned and controlled Network Information Center.

OpenNIC (also referred to as the OpenNIC Project) is a user owned and controlled top-level Network Information Center that offers a non-national alternative to traditional Top-Level Domain (TLD) registries such as ICANN. As of January 2017 OpenNIC recognizes and peers all existing ICANN TLDs, for compatibility reasons. However, OpenNIC has not yet evaluated and does not hold a formal position on future ICANN TLDs.

Contents

In addition to resolving hostnames in the ICANN root, OpenNIC also resolves hostnames in OpenNIC operated namespaces, as well as within namespaces with which peering agreements have been established. Some OpenNIC recursive servers (Tier 2 servers) are known for their high speeds and low latency, relative to other more widely used DNS recursors, as well as their anonymizing or no-logging policies. Tier 2 servers are operated by community volunteers across a multitude of geographic locations.

Like all alternative root DNS systems, OpenNIC-hosted domains are unreachable to the vast majority of Internet users, because they require a non-default configuration in one's DNS resolver.

History

On June 1, 2000, an article was posted on kuro5hin.org advocating a democratically governed domain name system. The first OpenNIC servers went into operation July of that year.

OpenNIC Namespaces

These TLDs are currently served by OpenNIC, and were constructed with the approval of the OpenNIC community.

Peering agreements

OpenNIC provides resolution of select other alternative DNS roots.

New Nations

New Nations provides TLDs for nation-states that are not recognized by the ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 standard, and therefore haven't received their own ccTLD. Currently they provide .ku (Kurdish people), .te (Tamil Eelam), .ti (Tibet), and .uu (Uyghur people).

FurNIC

FurNIC aims to bring a unique identity to Furries, Furry Fandom, and other Anthropomorphic interest websites across the internet. FurNIC and OpenNIC work closely, with .fur (Furry fandom) generally being treated as part of OpenNIC for most purposes, rather than a separate peer entity.

Namecoin

OpenNIC resolves .bit (Namecoin) domains through the use of a centralized server which generates a DNS zone from the Namecoin blockchain. Access is provided through a Tier 1 server which bridges the OpenNIC system and Namecoin.

Emercoin

On January 15, 2015, domains registered in Emercoin's blockchain became accessible to all users of OpenNIC DNS. Emercoin DNS supports the domain zones .coin, .emc, .lib and .bazar. However, Emercoin DNS records can be registered/maintained from within the Emercoin software, and not as part of OpenNIC's management system.

Technical Zones

OpenNIC operates some Special-Use TLDs which are meant for technical or organizational purposes.

References

OpenNIC Wikipedia