ICANN, the organization that oversees Internet domain names, has approved new top-level domain names that could end with .anything. For instance, The New York Times may opt for the .nyt suffix while Google could acquire an address that ends with .google.
This is how some popular Internet addresses may look like in the very-near future:
Mail.google.com (sub-domain of google.com ) –> http://mail.google
amazon.com/help (which is sub-directory of the amazon.com domain) –> http://help.amazon
While both individuals and organizations can apply for these custom top level domains, this is quite an expensive affair. The application fee itself for these new domains is $185k while you’ll have to pay another $25k to ICANN annually for maintaining the registry.
Applications for the new domain names will start early next year while the domains are expected to live at the end of 2012.