RESTON, VA (Marketwire) - Nearly six million domain names
were added to the Internet in the fourth quarter of 2011,
bringing the total number of registered domain names to more
than 225 million worldwide across all domains, according to
the latest Domain Name Industry Brief, published by (NASDAQ:
VRSN), the trusted provider of Internet infrastructure
services for the networked world.
The increase of 5.9 million domain names equates to a
growth rate of 2.7 percent over the third quarter of 2011,
and marks the fourth straight quarter with greater than 2
percent growth. Registrations have grown by more than 20.4
million, or 10 percent, since the fourth quarter of 2010.
The .com and .net Top Level Domains (TLDs) experienced
aggregate growth in the fourth quarter, reaching a combined
total of 113.8 million names. This represents approximately
a 2 percent increase in the base over the third quarter of
2011 and an 8 percent increase over the same quarter in
2010. New .com and .net registrations totaled 7.9 million
during the quarter. This is a 4 percent increase
year-over-year in new registrations. The .com/.net renewal
rate for the fourth quarter was 73.5 percent, up from 73.3
percent for the third quarter.
Verisign's average daily Domain Name System (DNS) query
load during the quarter was 64 billion, with a peak of 117
billion. Compared to the previous quarter, the daily
average increased 8 percent and the peak grew 51 percent.
Domain Name Hijacking - A Serious but Manageable Threat
The latest issue of the Domain Name Industry Brief focuses
on "domain name hijacking," in which perpetrators
fraudulently transfer domain names by password theft or
social engineering. As defined by security experts, domain
name hijacking occurs when an attacker falsifies the
registration data for a domain name, transferring that name
away from its rightful registrant and gaining full
administrative and operational control over the domain.
The brief analyzes how attackers use a wide range of
techniques to hijack domain names, from spyware and
keystroke loggers to "social engineering," in
which scammers impersonate registrants, registrars, or
other entities in the chain of trust in order to gain
access to passwords and personal information.
Regardless of the technique used, the end-result for
registrants is often severe. Once an attacker has full
control of a domain name, they have free reign to use it
for any number of nefarious purposes, from creating their
own scam websites, to hosting illegal and dangerous
content, to extorting the original owner.
While the danger of domain name hijacking is significant,
it is a threat that can be significantly reduced with
proper planning and mitigation techniques, such as:
-
Researching a registrar's security offerings -- and
taking advantage of the tools they offer -- can go a long
way toward mitigating risk of hijacking;
-
Employing password best practices for domain name
registrations;
-
Determining if a registry is using two-factor
authentication to protect registrants; and
-
Utilizing services such as Verisign's Registry Lock,
which allows registrants to set the conditions under
which their registration information can and cannot be
changed.
Verisign publishes the Domain Name Industry Brief to
provide Internet users throughout the world with
significant statistical and analytical research and data on
the domain name industry and the Internet as a whole.
Copies of the 2011 fourth quarter Domain Name Industry
Brief, as well as previous reports, can be obtained at:
http://www.verisigninc.com/DNIB.
About Verisign
VeriSign, Inc. (NASDAQ: VRSN) is the trusted provider of
Internet infrastructure services for the networked world.
Billions of times each day, Verisign helps companies and
consumers all over the world connect between the dots.
Additional news and information about the company is
available at
www.verisigninc.com.
VRSNF
Statements in this announcement other than historical data
and information constitute forward-looking statements
within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of
1933 as amended and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 as amended. These statements involve risks and
uncertainties that could cause Verisign's actual
results to differ materially from those stated or implied
by such forward-looking statements. The potential risks and
uncertainties include, among others, the uncertainty of
future revenue and profitability and potential fluctuations
in quarterly operating results due to such factors as
increasing competition, pricing pressure from competing
services offered at prices below our prices and changes in
marketing practices including those of third-party
registrars; challenging global economic conditions;
challenges to ongoing privatization of Internet
administration; the outcome of legal or other challenges
resulting from our activities or the activities of
registrars or registrants; new or existing governmental
laws and regulations; changes in customer behavior,
Internet platforms and web-browsing patterns; the
uncertainty of whether Verisign will successfully develop
and market new services; the uncertainty of whether our new
services will achieve market acceptance or result in any
revenues; system interruptions; security breaches; attacks
on the Internet by hackers, viruses, or intentional acts of
vandalism; the uncertainty of the expense and duration of
transition services and requests for indemnification
relating to completed divestitures; the uncertainty of
whether Project Apollo will achieve its stated objectives;
the impact of the introduction of new gTLDs; the
uncertainty of whether the .com Registry Agreement renewal
will occur by December 1, 2012, if at all; and when a Chief
Financial Officer will be named. More information about
potential factors that could affect the Company's
business and financial results is included in
Verisign's filings with the Securities and Exchange
Commission, including in the Company's Annual Report on
Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2011, Quarterly
Reports on Form 10-Q and Current Reports on Form 8-K.
Verisign undertakes no obligation to update any of the
forward-looking statements after the date of this
announcement.
©2012 VeriSign, Inc. All rights reserved. VERISIGN, the
VERISIGN logo, and other trademarks, service marks, and
designs are registered or unregistered trademarks of
VeriSign, Inc. and its subsidiaries in the United States
and in foreign countries. All other trademarks are property
of their respective owners.
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