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Fix a typo around public suffix restrictions.
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Thanks to @dbaron for the comment in w3ctag/design-reviews#342 (comment)
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mikewest authored Feb 8, 2019
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Expand Up @@ -157,9 +157,9 @@ first-partyness. We could allow `https://a.example/`, `https://b.example/`, and
the new first-party set's origins' registrable domains. See the [FAQ entry below](#origin-vs-domain)
for a bit more detail on this point.

3. None of the origins specified is itself a registrable domain. That is,
[public suffixes](https://publicsuffix.org/) like `https://appspot.com/` cannot themselves
be part of a first-party set.
3. None of the origins specified is itself a [public suffix](https://publicsuffix.org/). That
is, origins like `https://appspot.com/` cannot themselves be part of a first-party set, as
they explicitly shard themselves into registrable domains with distinct owners.

This seems like a reasonable approach to start with. It has straightforward properties, and can be
well understood in terms of policy delivery mechanisms that already exist.
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