Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) is a non-profit organization that collects domain information. Use the ICANN Lookup tool to find your domain registrar. In the search field, enter your domain name and click Lookup. Some domains are registrared by resellers through a separate registrar.
On June 15, 2023, Google entered into a definitive agreement with Squarespace, indicating their intent to purchase all domain registrations and related customer accounts from Google Domains. When the transaction between Google and Squarespace closed on September 7, 2023, all Google Domains users became customers of Squarespace.
Adding your Google Workspace verification record takes about 10 minutes. The time it takes for your verification record to become active depends on your domain host. After your records are active, it can take up to one hour for us to confirm you added the record, but it usually happens quickly. Give feedback about this article.
CNAME record values. When you add a CNAME record to your domain's DNS settings, you must enter specific values depending on what you're using the CNAME record for. Below are the values to use when configuring CNAME records for various uses with Google services. You enter these values at your domain host, not in your Google Admin console.
In any web browser, go to admin.google.com. Starting from the sign-in page, enter the email address and password for your admin account (it does not end in @gmail.com). If you forgot your password, go to Reset your administrator password. An admin account has privileges to manage services for other people in your organization.
Add your verification code. (a) In the setup tool, copy your verification code. (b) Switch to the tab with your registrar's web site and create a new TXT record. Look for a field called Name. This field might also be called Host, Hostname, or Alias. Many registrars want you to enter @ in this field.
A domain name (often simply called a domain) is an easy-to-remember name that’s associated with a physical IP address on the Internet. It’s the unique name that appears after the @ sign in email addresses, and after www. in web addresses. For instance, the domain name example.com might translate to the physical address 198.102.434.8.
Next to the domain name that you want to connect to a website, click More and select Manage DNS. The DNS Management page opens. Scroll down to Nameservers and click Change. The Connect My Domain to a Website page opens. Click Enter my own nameservers (advanced). In the first Nameserver field, enter the nameserver provided by your web host.
Tell Google to verify your code. (a) Return to the browser tab where you have the Google Workspace setup tool open. (You can reopen the tool if you closed it.) (b) On the page where you copied your verification code, scroll to the bottom and click Protect domain.
Security CNAME: “Name: XXX, Destination: XXX.” This is different for each person and is specific to your blog and your Google Account. Set up your domain provider settings. Go to your domain provider’s website. Find the Domain Name System (DNS) in the control panel. Under "Name, Label or Host," enter the subdomain from step 5 above.