Wrong, with large userbases you're going to lose business doing that, many real businesses using novelty TLDs, at least in the industry I'm working in now. Plus I think it should be illegal from an net neutrality perspective to treat different TLDs differently and to outright deny service.
> Wrong, with large userbases you're going to lose business doing that, many real businesses using novelty TLDs
Yes, a security filtering system can have false positives. Can't get them all.
> "Plus I think it should be illegal from an net neutrality perspective "
This is what you would say if your only conception of law comes from reading stuff on the internet about the internet. I don't think you've had much legal training.
I think in the US they call it right to refuse service. It's not a law per-se but rather a right businesses have unless prohibited by other reasons. One such reason being discrimination of protected classes, like races, sexuality, gender. But they need to be one of the specific classes protected by law, you can discriminate against small businesses for example, that's just business.