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  1. A dot-com company, or simply a dot-com (alternatively rendered dot.com, dot com, dotcom or .com), is a company that conducts most of its businesses on the Internet, usually through a website on the World Wide Web that uses the popular top-level domain ".com". As of 2021, .com is by far the most used TLD, with almost half of all registrations.

  2. Dot-com bubble, period (1995–2000) of large, rapid, and ultimately unsustainable increases in the valuation of stock market shares in Internet service and technology companies, then commonly referred to as “dot-com” companies, including fledgling businesses, or “start-ups,” with little or no record.

  3. The dot-com bubble (or dot-com boom) was a stock market bubble that ballooned during the late-1990s and peaked on Friday, March 10, 2000.

  4. Aug 8, 2022 · The dot-com bubble was a stock market bubble fueled by highly speculative investments in internet-based businesses during the bull market from 1995 to 2000. It saw the value of equity markets grow dramatically, with the technology-dominated Nasdaq index rising five-fold during that period.

  5. Feb 27, 2021 · A dotcom, or dot-com, is a company with a business model that is dependent on the operation of a website. Dotcoms get their name from the .com at the end of their website URLs.

  6. Dec 4, 2018 · The successful dot-coms of the late ‘90s and early ‘00s had a few things in common: they all vowed to “change the world”, had crazy-high valuations, and were wildly unprofitable. Here’s a look at one company’s rapid rise and fall -- and the bubble’s lasting impact, from internet historian Brian McCullough.

  7. This is a list of companies that were affected by the dot-com bubble. Companies. 3Com: Shares soared after announcing the corporate spin-off of Palm, Inc. 360networks: A fiber optic company that had a market capitalization of over $13 billion but filed for bankruptcy a few months later.

  8. May 31, 2024 · The dotcom bubble was a rapid rise in U.S. technology stock equity valuations fueled by investments in Internet-based companies during the bull market in the late 1990s.

  9. May 18, 2018 · At the most basic level, "dot-com" is simply a colloquial term born of the suffix appended to Uniform Resource Locators (URLs), as in www.companyname.com. But the term has come to stand for a variety of phenomena.

  10. Biggest Dot-com Companies. In the video below you can see the evolution of the largest Dot-com companies from 1998 to 2021. The data, in dollars, refers to the market capitalization of each company year by year. In 2019, the company with the highest market capitalization turns out to be Amazon.