- Taman kanak-kanak
- SMA Santa Ursula
- Hasanuddin dari Gowa
- Kabupaten Lampung Selatan
- Hamim Tohari
- Mayor Jenderal
- Luqman Arief
- Brigadir Jenderal
- Danang Hadiwibowo
- Akademi Militer
- TK
- .tk
- TK Maxx
- TK-3
- TKS
- Project 941 submarine
- Tk (software)
- Toru Kitajima
- RCA TK-40/41
- Bangladeshi taka
Expend4bles (2023)
Terminator: Dark Fate (2019)
Godzilla: King of the Monsters (2019)
Godzilla vs. Kong (2021)
The Exorcist: Believer (2023)
Our Man In L.A. (2024)
Stream (2024)
Zombie Town (2023)
Milk (2024)
Black Eagle (1988)
10 Cloverfield Lane (2016)
tk
TK GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21
TK may refer to:
People
Ted Kaczynski (1942–2023), American domestic terrorist
Tony Kanaan (born 1974), Brazilian racing driver
Tony Khan (born 1982), American businessman
Theodore K. Lawless (1892–1971), American dermatologist and philanthropist
T. K. Oommen (born 1937), Indian sociologist, author, and professor
Places
Tehsil or taluk, an administrative division in several South Asian countries
Tokelau (ISO 3166-1 country code)
TK (South Korea) (Taegu–Kyŏngbuk), two administrative regions
Arts and media
= Music
=TK (Peruvian rock band)
TK Records, a record label
Tetsuya Komuro (born 1958), also known as TK, Japanese musician and producer
Toru Kitajima (born 1982), also known as TK from Ling Tosite Sigure, Japanese musician
= Television
=Takeru "T.K." Takaishi, a character from Digimon anime
TK, a character in Angel Beats!
= Other media
=TK, a identification prefix for Imperial stormtroopers in the classic era of the Star Wars universe
TK, the protagonist of the game Driver: Parallel Lines
"Tk'tk'tk", a science-fiction short story by David D. Levine
Tidens Krav, a newspaper published in Kristiansund, Norway
Tom Kent (active 1970s–2000s), American radio DJ
Businesses
ThyssenKrupp, a German industrial conglomerate
Turkish Airlines (IATA code TK)
TK Maxx, the European arm of TJ Maxx
Science and technology
.tk, the Internet top-level domain for Tokelau
Tk (software), a GUI toolkit
Telecine, a process of transferring motion picture film to video
Thymidine kinase, a protein
Transketolase, an enzyme in the pentose phosphate pathway and in the Calvin cycle
Type 94 tankette, a vehicle of the Imperial Japanese Army
Korovin pistol, a Russian semi-automatic pistol
Other uses
Bangladeshi taka, a currency
Takate kote, a form of Box tie in Japanese bondage
Tekken, a 2015 fighting game
Telekinesis, an alleged psychic ability
To come (publishing), commonly abbreviated as "TK"
Traditional knowledge
Turkmen language (ISO 639-1 language code)
Transitional kindergarten, part of the California public school system
Ταχυδρομικός Κώδικας, Postal codes in Greece
See also
All pages with titles containing Tk
KT (disambiguation)
T (disambiguation)
K (disambiguation)
TKS (disambiguation)
.tk GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21
.tk is the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for Tokelau, a territory of New Zealand in the South Pacific.
The .tk TLD is managed by Teletok, a local telecommunications company who outsourced the domain registry operation to a Dutch company Freenom, who was additionally also acting as a registrar. As Freenom offered free registration, the .tk ending was often associated with malicious activities like phishing, spam and cybersquatting. In 2023, Freenom stopped offering new .tk registrations in their registrar business as a result of a lawsuit with Meta. Their registry operations for other registrars were not affected by this. Freenom announced it would exit the domain registry and registrar business in February 2024.
Teletok opened negotiations with the domain registry operator of .nz, for help in managing .tk after Freenom's exit.
Overview
Tokelau allows any individual to register domain names. Users and small businesses were able to register any number of domain names free of charge (with some restrictions). In addition to the name itself, users can opt to forward their web traffic using HTML frames and their email traffic, with a maximum of 250 addresses per user log in, or use full DNS, either via their own or third-party servers, or by using Dot TK's servers. There are content restrictions for free domains, banning sites containing sexual content, drug use, hate speech, firearms, and spam or copyright infringement. Dot TK requires free domains to have a regular traffic of visitors, and if a domain's redirect target does not work (even temporarily) the domain is taken offline. If a domain violates any of these terms, it is replaced by a Sedo advertisement page, and no advance warning is given.
Dot TK also provides .tk websites with the option to join a network called TiKinet, a close-knit network that links sites to each other based on keywords called TiKilinks. The network is expected to increase traffic to the websites, many of which are personal sites and blogs operated by individuals who otherwise would have no way to advertise their sites.
To be able to get a "special" .tk domain name the user must buy it. This includes trademark domain names for most Fortune 500 companies and common dictionary terms. Paid domain names cost US$19.90 for the first two years. Potentially valuable names with fewer than 4 characters are similarly unavailable for free registration and must generally be purchased at a premium price of over $1000.
Dot TK launched a new service called TweaK for Twitter users in April 2010, offering a URL shortening service that uses less space than many others, and for Facebook where the user can rename Facebook account pages with a .tk name.
In 2016, Nominet released a world map where each country was resized according to the popularity of its top-level domain. The .tk domain ranked first worldwide with 31,311,498 registered domain names (China (.cn) ranked 2nd with 16,810,737 registered domain names). The revenues from the .tk top-level domain business represent about 1⁄6 of the island's annual income.
Criticism
In 2006, McAfee conducted a survey in which they claim out of the 95 percent most trafficked web sites, .tk domains were twice as likely as the global average to be used for "unwanted behaviours", including scams such as phishing and spam. However, in 2008 McAfee reported that the threat of scams like phishing and spam was significantly reduced with .tk and that other top level domains such as .com and .net were much more used in such scams.
A 2011 report by the Anti Phishing Working Group blamed Tokelau's bad reputation on the registry Dot TK. It acquired the right to operate the top level domain and is responsible for the current free registration system. .tk domains logged 2533 of 11768 (~21.5%) total phishing attacks in the second half of 2010 Internet-wide.
A 2018 report by Michelle Base-Bursey stated that, "The third most prevalent TLD for phishing attacks is .tk, the country code for Tokelau, a territory north of New Zealand in the South Pacific."
In 2016, the Anti-Phishing Working Group stated that the .cc, .com, .pw, and .tk domain names accounted for 75% of all malicious domain registrations.
On 3 March 2023, Meta filed a lawsuit against Freenom alleging cybersquatting violations and trademark infringement, and new domain registrations were halted. The lawsuit references a 2021 study on the abuse of domains conducted by Interisle Consulting Group, which discovered that the ccTLDs operated by Freenom made up five of the top ten TLDs most abused by phishers. In November 2023, ICANN terminated its registrar accreditation agreement with Freenom due to failure to cure breaches of the agreement within 21 days of notice. On 12 February 2024, Freenom announced that it had settled the lawsuit with Meta under undisclosed terms, and that it would exit the domain name and registry business.
By early March 2024, around 99% of Freenom domains (mostly those under .tk, .cf, and .gq), roughly 12.6 million, were no longer accessible, although it was reported that some paid domains were still active. Most of these domains hosted their DNS with Cloudflare, which consequently saw a 22% drop in its number of hosted domains.
References
External links
IANA .tk whois information
.tk Registration