One name. You define B and X.
Owning byo-x.com doesn't include byo-shop.com, byo-ai.com, or any other byo-*.com address — those are separate domains, owned or unregistered independently. What you get is the name itself: a short, single-hyphen .com built on a pattern people already recognize.
Bring your own device, key, model, license — the shorthand is already fluent in tech. byo-x.com is the brand-level version of that same idea: bring it, build it, or be it — the B is left open on purpose, same as the X.
Every tab below is still just byo-x.com — these are the actual segments already using "bring/build your own" language.
This isn't a made-up trend. These are independent, currently growing markets that already use "bring your own" or "build your own" as working vocabulary.
BYOM and BYOK have moved from niche options to standard architecture at Salesforce, GitLab, and Microsoft Azure — enterprises want model and key control, not vendor lock-in.
The EU AI Act's GPAI rules are already enforceable, with high-risk obligations landing August 2026. Over 20 US states now have comprehensive privacy laws. Both push companies toward customer-controlled, auditable architectures.
Gartner projects 75% of new applications will be built with low-code/no-code tools by the end of 2026 — citizen developers already outnumber professional developers roughly 4 to 1.
Roughly a quarter of US consumers actively seek product customization, and the US custom products market is projected near $122B by 2034 — Gen Z and Millennials lead, often paying a premium for it.
A single, ownable name for whatever you bring. Serious inquiries only — tell me what your X is and what you're offering.
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