Not necessarily. ".com" is the official suffix for commercial domains, not governments (they use the ".gov" suffix). However, a government could certainly purchase a ".com" domain.
The ".com" in the address of a website stands for "commercial".
COM=commercial When referring to an internet address, such as www.google.com, the COM represents COMMERCIAL.
com=commercial (it used to mean that the .com sites were selling something... but it doesn't really mean anything anymore, since anyone can buy and use a .com address.
Intuit.
government
It means "commercial", It is what we call a "top level domain" address, and it used to be a way for a web site to convey its publishing intent.
.com (or dot-com) is the designation for a URL address on the internet. Answers means the solution to questions.
com means web address or cumershel.
No. Not necessarily.I have 15 ".com" domain names legally registered and I'm a Canadian citizen and resident.Some TLDs (top level domains) have restrictions, but ".com" domain names don't.Example: ".ca" domain names have Canadian residency requirements.But the better known ".com", ".net", ".org", can be registered to anybody on earth.Dot-Com means commercial. Worldwide online.So, "if a website address contains .com" then no, there's no reason to assume that it's American.A "WhoIs" lookup on the domain might help find information about who owns the domain name.
The owner of Jet2.com is Philip Meeson
No it does not.
Probably the person that asked the question.