Secured by Cardano Blockchain

Domain data is stored entirely on-chain, making it both secure and censorship-resistant.

Available TLDs

Choose yours

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.d0.to & .ezz.to

  • Offshore under Tongo law
  • Censorship-resistant
  • Web 2.0 ready
  • Web 3.0 ready
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.crypto

  • Offshore domain
  • Censorship-resistant
  • Pending ICANN application
  • Web 3.0 ready
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.ada.lat

  • For cardano lovers
  • Censorship-resistant
  • Web 2.0 ready
  • Web 3.0 ready
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How it works?

Blockchain hybrid technology

Domains are registered on the Cardano blockchain, ensuring full decentralization and transparency. They are accessible via Web3 through our public DNS resolvers, browser extensions, and any compatible dApp. Furthermore, we utilize our root DNS resolvers to bridge Web3 and Web2, enabling seamless global access to these blockchain domains. This integration ensures compatibility with traditional internet infrastructure, including search engines, Cloudflare, Let’s Encrypt, and all major cloud platforms.

  • Domain its on the blockchain forever
  • No renewal fees
  • Fully decentralized
  • Global visivility
  • Tamper proof
  • Secure and censorship-resistant
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Censorship is increasing

Google stands as a symbol of centralized control and censorship, highlighting the need for truly decentralized and censorship-resistant alternatives.


Google is no longer merely filtering search results — it has begun exercising direct control over website accessibility through its WebRisk system.

This centralized tool can arbitrarily block entire domains, often for reasons as minor as hosting copyrighted material. Once blacklisted, a website becomes permanently inaccessible on browsers integrated with Google’s security ecosystem, displaying the well-known red “dangerous site” warning screen.

Beyond censorship, this mechanism also involves the collection of user data — including IP addresses and accessed URLs — further extending Google’s control over both web traffic and user privacy. Many web developers have wondered how Google becomes aware of a newly created website almost instantly; WebRisk provides the answer.