The domains are owned by the registrant
The top-level domain, in English top-level domain TLD for short, is the last part of the internet domain name, it is in other words, the alphanumeric code that follows the 'point' to the right of the URL, for example, the Internet address of the Italian wikipedia is it.wikipedia.org and therefore falls within the top-level domain org.
The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) currently classifies top-level domains into three different types: top level domains (country code top-level domain or ccTLD): used by a state or a dependent territory. It consists of two letters, for example jp for Japan and it for Italy, for the European Union or European, generic top level domains (generic top-level domains, or gTLDs): Used (at least in theory) by particular classes of organizations (for example, com for commercial organizations). This suffix is ââof three or more letters. Most gTLDs are available all over the world, but for historical reasons, gov, edu and mil, respectively, are reserved to the government, army and U.S. educational institutions, infrastructural TLDs (top-level domain infrastructure): the top-level domain arpa is the only one.










