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Are IDN domain names case-sensitive?

Some people will reply that domain names are not case-sensitive. In the new Unicode world this is no longer true.

(Source)

I thought one of the steps in the Unicode > Punycode conversion was a "normalisation", which rendered domain names lower case.

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TRiG Avatar asked Oct 05 '11 19:10

TRiG


1 Answers

For old-fashioned ASCII-based domain names, Yes, domain names have been and continue to be case-insensitive.

For example, all of these represent the same domain:

  • example.com
  • Example.com
  • EXAMPLE.COM
  • EXampLE.com

In modern DNS, we now have Internationalized Domain Names (IDN) which allows Unicode characters. The problem is that defining upper- and lowercase can be tricky in some languages and character sets beyond ASCII (Unicode is a superset of US-ASCII).

The intent of domain names is to be case-insensitive, but there may be complications with particular characters in particular scripts of particular human languages. So there is no simple YES or NO answer to your question.

If using non-ASCII domain names, you should read:

  • Internationalized domain name on Wikipedia
  • Domain Name System (DNS) Case Insensitivity Clarification Official spec (IETF RFC 4343)
like image 83
Basil Bourque Avatar answered Oct 15 '22 04:10

Basil Bourque