Internet Basics: Domain Name Forwarding is Like a Hall of Mirrors
That's what domain name forwarding is like.
Say you're on the Internet and you hear about a great new
product and you can find out all about it at newproduct.com. So
you type "newproduct.com" into your browser.
Only you don't end up at newproduct.com. Instead, you somehow
end up at othersite.com. You're not too concerned, because there
on the page is the product you were looking for as well as some
other products besides.
But how come you didn't end up at newproduct.com? And if the
people with the product wanted you to end up at othersite.com,
why didn't they put that domain name instead?
To answer the first question, you probably ended up at
othersite.com instead of newproduct.com because of domain
forwarding. If so, the people who set this up did the following:
•They bought the domain name othersite.com and created a website
there with all their products.
•They bought the domain name newproduct.com and told people
that's where the new product info is.
•They used domain forwarding so that whoever went to
newproduct.com would get forwarded to othersite.com. They could
use domain forwarding with other domain names as well, such as
bigproduct.com, smallproduct.com, and tinyproduct.com. No matter
which domain name you went to, you'd end up exactly where they
wanted you, which was at othersite.com, where ALL their products
are.
To answer the second question, the reasons they'd do this are:
•Instead of having different websites for each product, people
often put all their products on one site, or at one domain name,
but advertise the products individually using product-specific
domain names. Why? (see below)
•It's more impressive to have a product-specific domain name
(e.g., superbike.com) than just a generic domain name (e.g.,
bikestore.com). It's also more likely you'll remember the
product-specific domain name.
Now, most of us would only be mildly confused to end up on
othersite.com when we thought we were going to newproduct.com.
In fact, a lot of us wouldn't even notice we didn't end up at
the domain name we thought we were going to - not unless we
looked at the top of our browser to the URL address of the
webpage we ended up on.
But where it can get confusing is this. The people with the
domain name newproduct.com could use masked domain forwarding.
With masked domain forwarding, you'd type in newproduct.com,
you'd end up at othersite.com, but the fact you were forwarded
would be masked. In other words, the URL address at the top of
the browser would indicate you were indeed at newproduct.com,
when in fact, you were at othersite.com.
And to make things even more confusing, no matter which page you
went to on othersite.com (which is where you'd really be), the
URL at the top of your browser would still read newproduct.com.
Now that's confusing!
Either way, masked or unmasked, domain forwarding simply spins
the visitor around a bit, moving them this way when they thought
they'd be going that way.
And that's why domain name forwarding is like a hall of mirrors.
Copyright (c) Grant Pasay 2005. All rights reserved. You may
forward this article in its entirety to anyone you wish.
About the author:
Grant Pasay is a writer, musician, moviemaker, and author of the
new eBook, "The Internet Is Like A Refrigerator: And Other Weird
Comparisons That Make it Easy to Understand Everything From AOL
to Zip Files."
Check out Grant's free/brandable ebook at:
http://grantpasay.com/refrigerator/
Check out Grant at: http://grantpasay.com/