ccTLD for Email Can be Problematic

About 9 years ago, I sold a very nice .com domain name to a startup that used a ccTLD domain name. The CEO was not a shrewd negotiator, and in the course of our discussion about why he *needed* to buy my .com domain name, he told me about some of the issues he was having with his current domain name. The primary issue? Email.

Employees were having issues when they filled out forms and signed up for various accounts. Corporate emails from employees were also inadvertently being marked as spam by recipient email providers. This was in addition to confusion for consumers, but at that time, it seemed like the email issues plaguing the company were on the top of the CEO’s mind.

Knowing the ccTLD the company was using before acquiring my .com domain name, I am sure the email issue would have been rectified by now. It’s a non-issue at this point because the company was acquired.

At this point, with the proliferation of ccTLDs and alternative gTLDs being used around the world, one might think email would no longer be problematic for users of non .com domain names. Apparently, this is not the case, as one person shared on X.

Martin Amps, shared screenshots that show his Coinbase account has been restricted, reportedly due to using a .SO domain name for his email address at Coinbase. The second screenshot shows the concern is related to the ccTLD, as Coinbase compliance asked about family or friends from Somalia.

There are quite a few startups that use a .SO domain name for their business without having a connection to the country of Somalia. Notion, for example, uses Notion.so for its website despite acquiring Notion.com. It is interesting that Coinbase flagged this user’s account because of the ccTLD domain name used for email.

Elliot Silver
Elliot Silver
About The Author: Elliot Silver is an Internet entrepreneur and publisher of DomainInvesting.com. Elliot is also the founder and President of Top Notch Domains, LLC, a company that has closed eight figures in deals. Please read the DomainInvesting.com Terms of Use page for additional information about the publisher, website comment policy, disclosures, and conflicts of interest. Reach out to Elliot: Twitter | Facebook | LinkedIn

5 COMMENTS

  1. Ever since the firs time I noticed a nGTLD not hyperlink its self in an email or WYSIWYG Editor the bell went off that using one is likely to cause all sorts of very annoying issues. Another good reason to stay away from using them for anything you’ll be taking seriously. But they make for good conversion however.

  2. I have seen businesses using ccTLDs such as .co and having no problem with their listings on Coinbase. So it depends on which ccTLD you use. Anyway, I think the X post shows that Coinbase’s customer support is not very efficient in this respect.

  3. These companies do actually have a connection to Somalia, they are buying a product of the heavily sanctioned Somalian government and associating with it for their web address. There is a reason why Godaddy had to stop selling the extension 9 years ago.

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