E164 ----- Original Message ----- From: "Mark Hughes" <effectivebusiness§pplications.com.au> To: <dns§lists.auda.org.au> Sent: Wednesday, June 12, 2002 2:04 PM Subject: RE: [DNS] New 2LD Proposals (to date) > > > In the case of id.au, a cheaper price will have an impact. The ability > > to get a 'life-long' (in reality domain name comes up for license for > > every 2 years) would be appealing in this case and even more appealing > > if the price is 'affordable'. > > Cheaper price & permanent address / email has been available to individuals > for yonks. Just register your own personal domain name in a global TLD such > as .com, .net, .org. > > To support an assertion that making id.au available cheaply will > automatically create demand, one would have to have some evidence that a > third level domain under id.au is going to be more attractive than a second > level domain under .com, .net, or .org. If anyone thinks they have any such > evidence (meaning 'evidence', as different from 'speculation', or 'hope'), > I'd be interested in seeing it. > > > > > Consider the shear novelty factor of having john§smith.id.au. > > Of course, consumers aren't going to be able to have firstname§surname.id.au > (with very rare exceptions) because the vast majority of people have the > same surname as other people. So once the first 10,000 or so id.au domain > names are registered, the other 19,000,000 consumers will have to settle for > something else. > > > > There are two advantages of a gTLD over id.au for personal domain names. > > 1. You get to register at the second level, rather than at the third level. > 2. There are no artificial restrictions on what you can have. > > By point 2 I'm referring to the restrictions that say your id.au domain name > must equal, be a contraction of, or be derived from or include one or more > words from, the Registrant's personal name. > > > > > So.................... > if we take a completely random example :) > > Cyrille Lefevre could apply for cyrille.id.au, or lefevre.id.au, but not for > fish.id.au or gingerfish.id.au, even if ginger fish is what he prefers to > use as his email & identity on the internet. > > I know lots of people who use words other than their own name for their > personal domain names. One I know uses the name of the best horse he ever > rode (he was a jockey 20 years ago). Domain names are an opportunity for > people to create their own identity from scratch - I'm not at all convinced > that everyone wants a web address/email address equivalent, or even close > to, to their own name. > > I'm damned if I know why id.au has these restrictions. Yeah, I know I sound > like a broken record when I point out yet again how poor was the report of > the Name Policy Panel that came up with this stuff. But I'm gonna do it > anyway :) > > > > Regards, Mark > > Mark Hughes > Effective Business Applications Pty Ltd > effectivebusiness§pplications.com.au > www.pplications.com.au > +61 4 1374 3959 > > > > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- - > 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. (321 subscribers.) > >Received on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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