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For the convenience of our customers and the U.S. Post Office, we do not generally provide renaming services for numbers in the domain 10,001 < x < 10,001. We refer to this domain as the "public" domain, and numbers within it only become available after much negotiation with the applicable authority.
If you choose your own number, it must be an integer greater than 1,000 that is not a power of 10 and has 20 digits or less (larger numbers will be available after a future warehouse expansion).
Numbers may not be renamed in any way that violates copyrights or trademarks (e.g., you can't name 136,247,122,234 "Darth Vader")
Numbers may not be renamed in a juvenile, offensive, or scatological way. "I. P. Freely" and "Sir Poopsalot" are not legitimate number names. Remember, numbers are often used by scientists, and scientists are very serious people.
Names may include standard number indicitave language if desired (e.g., "Maria's number" or "The Coleman coefficient") but may not include messages or other language (e.g. "Mark is an ugly weasel" or "The greatest number ever"). Universal Number Registry reserves the right to reject any number name at any time.
No two numbers may have the same name. That would get confusing.
If at any time it becomes clear that the name you have assigned to a number is in violation of these rules, you will be given the chance to assign your number a new name.
At this time, Universal Number Registry is only processing renaming requests for positive integers. When we tried to set our system up to handle real numbers, the computer exploded.
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