One and two-letter ‘.co.uk’ domain names were madeavailableby Nominet last December, and Google has bid to buy g.co.uk, asreportedtoday by the FT.

Whilst Google hasn’t announced what it will use the domain for as of yet if successful, some other big digital brands have already been granted their single letter domain – Yahoo! has secured y.co.uk, whilst Virgin has nabbed V.co.uk. Elsewhere, T-Mobile’s parent company Deutsche Telekom is up against Huawei and a number of other big brands to secure the rights to t.co.uk.

Several two letter .co.uk domains have been available since the early days of the Internet, such as BT.co.uk. But these were registered before Nominet’s formation. Since 1996, it has been impossible to register domain names consisting of less than three characters in the UK.

In terms of two-letter domains, DIY chain B&Q recently secured the rights to BQ.co.uk under a special trademark scheme, and this is the same initiative which secured Yahoo! and Virgin their single letter domains.

Calling all Scaleup founders! Join the Soonicorn Summit on November 28 in Amsterdam.

Meet with the leaders of Picnic, Miro, Carbon Equity and more during this exclusive event dedicated to Scaleup Founders!

Following two registering phases so far, the ‘open to anyone’ land-rush phase is now underway and runs until 15th of June. Domains with more than one applicant will go to auction, and this could see some pretty high figures reached for the likes of A.co.uk.

There has been speculation that some of the letters not covered by trademarks could be snapped up by third parties such ascybersquattersor domain resellers, and this could well happen. However, if the buyer is shown to have procured a domain in bad faith, e.g. to exploit an existing brand, their purchase could be later challenged in court.

Story byPaul Sawers

Paul Sawers was a reporter with The Next Web in various roles from May 2011 to November 2014.

Follow Paul on Twitter: @psawers or check h(show all)Paul Sawers was a reporter with The Next Web in various roles from May 2011 to November 2014.

Follow Paul on Twitter:@psawersor check him out onGoogle+.

Get the TNW newsletter

Get the most important tech news in your inbox each week.

Also tagged with