Actually, no. The US$6.00 goes directly to Verisign. ICANN charges a per name fee that slides towards zero based on the volume of registrations under management for the registrar in question. For any medium-large registrar this fee is so close to zero (ie a few cents per name) as to be relatively insignificant. Nor is this $6 fee set by ICANN. Verisign can vary it within certain restrictions. You will note that the other new TLD registries have set their registry charges slightly below Verisign's $6 figure. rgds jon >-- Original Message -- >Reply-To: dns§lists.auda.org.au >From: "Dassa" <dassa§dhs.org> >To: <dns§lists.auda.org.au> >Date: Sat, 27 Apr 2002 11:52:56 +1000 >Subject: RE: [DNS] RE: auDA to consider new names for .au > > >|> -----Original Message----- >|> From: Jon Lawrence [mailto:jon§jonlawrence.com] >|> Sent: Saturday, April 27, 2002 12:25 AM >|> To: dns§lists.auda.org.au >|> Subject: RE: [DNS] RE: auDA to consider new names for .au >|> >|> >|> >You were equating the need for charging (higher) fees with the >provison >|> >of a professional service, as evidence in the past and present, this >|> >does not hold true and the level of fees charged has no bearing on >the >|> >service provided in most cases. >|> >|> No I wasn't. I simply said that I think the DNS should berun >professionally. >|> You assume that I think fees should rise, which I don't. >|> For instance I think the US$6 per name per year that Verisign >Registry >|> charge for .coms is way too high, especially as they have almost 30 >million >|> names under management. ><snip> > >One thing we should bear in mind is the difference between AuDA and >Registries/Registrars operating within the .au namespace. AuDA is >primarily concerned with the overall management of the namespace and the >fees they charge are to be used for different purposes to those charged >by Registries/Registrars operating within the namespace. > >The $6USD fee you quote above is set by ICANN and is delivered into >their control, much like the $11AuD quoted to go towards AuDA. When you >purchase a second level domain under .com $6USD goes to ICANN and the >rest of the registration fee goes to the Registry/Registrar. Once you >have a second level domain name you can create all the sub-domains you >wish at no further cost other than bandwidth and infrastructure. > >What I propose is that AuDA set some restrictions on how geographical >domains may be handled. So that there is price fixing at the sub-domain >level and a standard practice on how they are managed and registered. >The whole process can be under control to the consumer level. > >To expand: > >AuDA releases states.au. >The Registry for each state.au allows registrations of towns.state.au >under specific conditions and the body who has the registration for >town.state.au becomes a Registry for that domain and allows >registrations under it within specific conditions. We then have >individuals.town.state.au, businesses.town.state.au, >co-operatives.town.state.au, non-profit.town.state.au registrations. >There would need to be uniformity in how such consumer registrations are >formulated, for instance individual registrations may be allowed in the >form FirstName.Initial.LastName.town.state.au, with businesses etc >handled by trading name etc. There would be duplication at the hostname >level across a number of town.state.au domains but the actual domain >would be the identifier and provide for unique hostnames across the >nation. > >AuDA could take a slice of the states.au and towns.states.au >registrations. At the consumer level, the Registry handling the >namespace would be the only body to benefit from any fee, which should >be set at something like the $5 mark. > >The Registries for the towns.states.au domains could be anyone who >wishes to provide the service, providing they agree to the conditions >attached to the operation of the Registry including the price fixing. >There would need to be a complaints handling process and protection of >all namespaces with fall back provisions in the event any Registry goes >down. > >The above is a simplified version but I'm sure you can get the gist of >the idea. It is not new. > >The main points are: > >- Registries to be run under strict conditions >- Anyone can apply to act as a Registry for any town providing they >agree to meet the conditions >- Complaints handling to ensure conditions are met >- Fall back provided so consumers are not disadvantaged by Registry >failure >- Consistant formats for hostnames across all geographically based >domains >- Fixed low pricing at the consumer level. > >Darryl (Dassa) Lynch. > > >--------------------------------------------------------------------------- >List policy, unsubscribing and archives => http://www.auda.org.au/list/dns/ >Please do not retransmit articles on this list without permission of the > >author, further information at the above URL. (309 subscribers.) >Received on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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