Buy Canadian
A community dedicated to buying Canadian products.
Une communauté dédiée à l'achat de produits Canadiens.
Rules:
1. Posts must be related to buying Canadian-made goods and / or using Canadian-owned services
2. Absolutely no bigotry will be tolerated. This includes, but is not limited to, racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, etc.
3. AI Content Policy
Not allowed: AI-generated images or articles
Tolerated: AI-generated post summaries
4. When discussing a Canadian product that isn't available nationally, please do your best to specify where it can be purchased
5. Only content in French and English is permitted
6. Declare all self-promotion
Users are encouraged to report any content that violates our community guidelines
Règlements :
1. Les poteaux doivent être en lien avec l'achat de produits et / ou de services opérés par des canadiens
2. Aucune bigoterie ne sera tolérée. Ça comprend, mais sans se limiter à, le racisme, le sexisme, l’homophobie, la transphobie, etc.
3. Politique sur le contenu IA
Non permis : Images ou articles générés par l'IA
Toléré : Résumés IA de publications
4. Lors d'une discussion sur un produit canadien qui n'est pas disponible à l'échelle nationale, veuillez faire de votre mieux pour préciser où il peut être acheté
5. Seul le contenu en français et en anglais n'est toléré
6. Déclarez toute auto-promotion
Les utilisateurs sont encouragés à signaler tout contenu qui ne respecte pas nos directives communautaires
Related communities: Communautés connexes :
!buyeuropean@feddit.uk !buyafrican@baraza.africa !boycottus@lemmy.ca !canada@lemmy.ca !canada@lemmy.ml
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Afaik to register a .ca you either need to either be a Canadian, a permanent resident, some sort of legal entity in Canada (so say Amazon Canada), or the monarch. So this company should have some kind of Canadian presence if they own a .ca.
It used to be much, much tighter, but I'm going back to the 1990's for this. Back then you needed to have a real-life presence across the country to get a top level .CA domain. Otherwise you needed to get one in a provincial subdomain, like .QC.CA or .ON.CA.
Provinces might even demand that you get a municipal level subdomain.
But no more.
I seem to remember needing to show proof, like articles of incorporation...but that might have been for getting a VeriSign certificate.
Last time I registered a . CA domain there was no verification of anything.
my registrar required a Canadian billing address, but I think a PO box was acceptable, so probably wouldn't stop someone outside Canada from registering as long as they could get a PO box here.
Many country-based tlds don't (at least as far as I am aware). E.g, all of the .ai domains.
But .ca does.
Does it? I just checked most of the way out in godaddy for a made-up .ca domain that was available.
They only required that I describe the nature of my relationship with Canada. One of the choices was literally “trade-mark registered in Canada.”
That hardly feels like a requirement to be Canadian.
Trademark registered in Canada would be "some sort of legal entity in Canada". The claim was not that the individual needed to be Canadian and that was the only way.
Ok? Is that as simple as registering a bullshit LLC or something, because suddenly it doesn't sound like you have to be Canadian in any way to get a .ca. I feel like you are leveraging technicalities.
Btw, is there a source for this or is it just another (trust me bro) assertion?
There are a fuckton of international treaties that have trademark registration essentially be automatic in participating countries.
Because I'm curious what else you are trying to say. Literally every international company has to have a presence in Canada to respect trademarks?
That doesn't seem realistic.
https://www.cira.ca/en/resources/documents/domains/canadian-presence-requirements-registrants/
It does look like having a trademark can also suffice.
I'm saying that Canada enforces, at least in theory, who can register a .ca domain and that those people must have a connection to Canada that they have decided is worth the TLD. The CIRA is a non profit that, again in theory, enforces Canadian Presence rules.
You said you were not aware of TLDs that cared. I made you aware of one.
I don't know why I'm picking aggression from you for such a minor thing. If I'm reading tone wrong, my bad.