Below you will find answers to commonly asked questions. If there is anything else you are unsure of then please get in touch here.
We offer unique access to register crypto based domains at super low prices, as such we have a reasonable subscription model in place to facilitate registrations.
Of course. We have a free tier that allows you to register a single domain. This will let you test run our service before you decide to sign up for one of our plans
Of course! You can upgrade your plan at anytime if you need more domain registration capacity.
All domain registrations are payable using Stripe which supports all major credit / debit cards.
In simple terms, crypto domains aren’t stored on a server. Instead, they’re held on a public ledger or public registry which is accessible to anyone. Additionally, once a crypto domain is minted, they live in your crypto wallet forever. No one can take them away as there are no renewal fees.
During registration you have the option to point your crypto domain to a wallet address or set DNS records.
By pointing your crypto domain to your wallet address you can receive payments using your crypto domain. No longer do you need to share a a large meaningless string address. You can simply request payment using an easy to remember domain such as mywallet.crypto rather than 0xb794f5ea0ba39494ce839613fffba74279579268! See the difference?
Crypto domains can function just like standard domains. During registration you have the option to set various domain records such as A-records and Cnames etc.
Resolver records may contain classical DNS records along with other records. To distinguish those from other CNS (Crypto Name Service) records, the dns.* namespace is used. So DNS A corresponds to the dns.A CNS record. Any listed DNS record described in RFC standards is supported. All record names must follow the uppercase naming convention.
Unlike DNS, the CNS Resolver doesn’t support multiple records with the same key. Therefore, DNS record values must be stored as a JSON serialized array of strings.
- Example 1: A domain that needs one CNAME record set to example.com. must be configured as one crypto record dns.CNAME set to [“example.com.”] .
- Example 2: A domain that needs two A records set to 10.0.0.1 and 10.0.0.2 must be configured as one crypto record dns.A set to [“10.0.0.1″,”10.0.0.2”] .
This serialization is the only data transformation required when converting a traditional DNS record into a CNS record.
CNS records do not have a domain name associated with them. That is why there is no feature for storing your subdomain records inside a parent domain. Example: www.example.com record can only be set inside a resolver of www.example.com but never inside example.com.
No, not by default. Sharing ‘whois’ information is opt-in, i.e. something that you can choose to do. Otherwise, your identity will not be publicly known.
You can currently map over 300 cryptocurrency addresses to our domains to make payments easier.