Darryl, Some people just love making things up. I believe dictators also love making things up (someone who rules unconstrained by law). Basically if you make something up, get everyone to follow it, and are not accountable for your actions, I suspect that this would feed anyones appetite for power and domination. But then again what would I know. Everytime I post on this list I get accused of defemation, basically making thing up. So my point is that you can only make things up and get away with it if you are a dictator. However, historically dictators have never stood up too well against the test of time, and neither have their followers or advocates. Being a dictator however is not easy work. To stay in power a dictator must ensure political repression or lack of intervention as well as democratic inaction; must divide resources between repressing opponents and rewarding loyal followers; and must control the economy by creating a value system independent of market dynamics. Now this is not easy. A repressed opponent often leads them to pose as supporters (after all the repressed opponent must still maintain some sort of a living), and posing supporters become the source of imperfect information. This leads on to imperfect enforcement, as neither the dictator, nor his followers and advocates, nor the general public can readily trust each other's promises. The reason is simple, in democracies, people can express their preferences without fear of punishment, and they can retaliate at the ballot box against leaders who break their promises. These responses are hardly perfect solutions to the information and enforcement problems of any society or industry, but in dictatorships the situation is worse: people are often too afraid to say what they actually believe, and there is no easy way to punish a dictator who violates his pledges. Dictators therefore place more emphasis on building networks of loyalty to compensate for the weakness of democratic enforcement mechanisms; they also tend to lash out at bonds of loyalty that allow other members of society or an industry to enforce agreements potentially at odds with the dictator's wishes. Furthermore to increase the available resources to them, they must take control, to a large degree, of the economy and dictate a value system that would not be economically viable outside the dictatorship. So by giving your third level domains away for free I would hazard a guess that either: 1. You cant see the point of creating an artificial value system that does not apply outside of your business (a business that is based on an industry that is global) 2. You have no aspirations to become a dictator, as you have read your history. 3. You have better things to do with your time than juggling your resources between repressing opponents and rewarding loyal followers. 4. All of the above Harry -----Original Message----- From: Dassa [mailto:dasssa§ozemail.com.au] Sent: Wednesday, 26 September 2001 8:51 PM To: larry.bloch§netregistry.au.com; dns§auda.org.au Subject: RE: [DNS] What exactly is the problem with .AU.COM? |> -----Original Message----- |> From: Larry Bloch [mailto:larry§netregistry.au.com] |> Sent: Wednesday, 26 September 2001 1:44 PM |> To: dns§auda.org.au |> Subject: [DNS] What exactly is the problem with .AU.COM? |> |> |> We have replaced the term 'Top Level Domain' with 'domain ending'. I think |> that this is a clearer and more accurate description. What other changes |> would you prefer? Why make up new terms. You are offering hostnames under your domain. If you want to go further into the description of the domain, use the standard terms that are accepted in the industry. That way there will be no allegations of misleading text. Darryl (Dassa) Lynch Interest...Run a fair sized third level registry but we give our hostnames away for free :). -- This article is not to be reproduced or quoted beyond this forum without express permission of the author. 330 subscribers. Archived at http://listmaster.iinet.net.au/list/dns (user: dns, pass: dns) Email "unsubscribe" to dns-request§auda.org.au to be removed. -- This article is not to be reproduced or quoted beyond this forum without express permission of the author. 330 subscribers. Archived at http://listmaster.iinet.net.au/list/dns (user: dns, pass: dns) Email "unsubscribe" to dns-request§auda.org.au to be removed.Received on Wed Sep 26 2001 - 12:48:27 UTC
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