The auction for ownership of the .web domain has ended with one company paying $135m (£102m) for rights to use the suffix.
A company called Nu Dot Co won the auction and can now offer firms the chance to own a domain ending .web.
The figure is three times as much as was paid for the previous record holder, .shop, which went for $41.5m.
Losing bidders for the domain included Google and net registry firms Afilias, Radix and Donuts.
Raising cash
The
process of selling the potentially lucrative suffix began in 2012 but
has taken until now to resolve because many different companies applied
to run it.
It was almost delayed again because earlier this month bidders Radix and Donuts
alleged that they had found "discrepancies" in Nu Dot Co's application
to take part in the auction that, they said, should lead to the whole
thing being postponed.
Icann, which oversees the net's address
system, dismissed the allegation saying it was satisfied with Nu Dot
Co's application and there was no need for the sale to be delayed.
Donuts,
which owns the .business and .company domains, then launched legal
action seeking a restraining order to delay the sale. The application
for this order went before a judge in California earlier this week who
denied it citing questions over whether Donuts had the right to apply
for a delay.
Icann also filed an affidavit to the court saying the auction was being run in accordance with its terms and conditions.
It is not clear what Nu Dot Co intends to do with the .web domain and when it will be available for net firms to use.
Icann has now sold the rights to more than 16 top-level domains
that can be used in the same way as the more familiar .com and .org
suffixes. Other domain suffixes sold include .app and .hotel. Icann has
raised about $230m from the sale of these domains.
Auctions are still pending for a further 16 domains that several companies are bidding to control.
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