On 8/23/19 11:25 AM, bzs@theworld.com wrote:
On August 23, 2019 at 08:32 karl@cavebear.com (Karl Auerbach) wrote:
One has to wonder - why is it still ICANN policy to limit domain name contract terms to a maximum of ten years?
It doesn't sound like the problem was an expired domain name but reading the articles details are sketchy.
Multi-year fees can get a little tricky in terms of accounting and liability.
I agree, the case that started this thread may not have anything to do with registration periods. But that doesn't mean that ICANN's ten year maximum term is arbitrary and capricious. I was around when it happened and it was quit literally pulled out of thin air with no discussion, no rationale, no nothing - the best word is "fiat". So why not revisit that decision? Sure, yearly billing can be a nuisance at both ends. But as they say in housing: Why rent when you can own? ;-) Why not pay up for the full term at the start? Wanna buy 100 year registration, then pay the 100 year fee? And I would mention that the service that one gets for that registration fee is what? The *non* deletion of a record (amounting to an almost negligible amount of storage) and the operation of some highly amortized servers (and an almost negligible amount of bandwidth for any given name.) That aggregates to at most a few cents per name per year - for which registries are getting a fiat ICANN permitted monopoly registry fee amount that gives rise to profits-over-costs on the order of 10,000%. In other words, a 100 year registration ought to have an up front-cost that is not much different than a ten year registration. It is fully possible to register domain names on the basis of service costs, rental for a period of years. For instance in my hypothetical .ewe registry names are sold for a small fee - and represented by a digital certificate, a kind of bearer instrument (and thus no Whois) and no expiration - and revenue is obtained via services for things like updating name server records - https://cavebear.com/eweregistry/ (By-the-way, there is, or was, a blockchain based "namecoin" that uses the blockchain notion of "exactly one instance" to create a token that represents control of a domain name. The name coin is used as proof of control over that name, not as a form of money.) --karl--