I would like to voice my firm opposition to the part of the proposed Registry Agreement changes that would remove price caps for .org domain names. I have worked in the internet sector almost my entire professional career (nearly 25 years) and have firsthand experience with the extent to which it has changed during that time. I also still remember when the only three TLDs were .com, .net and .org, and that the latter's original purpose was for use by nonprofit entities or others that generally serve the public interest. While I'm aware that this restriction was lifted quite some time ago, and plenty of business entities and people with zero intents in that area can (and do) register .org names, it doesn't change the fact that .org domain names are still widely used by nonprofit / public-interest organizations around the world. Even if ICANN is excluding legacy .org domain owners from the pricing changes, this does not account for the suffix's certain use by future nonprofits in coming decades. And while allowing price increases for .org names is one thing (and in my view a reasonable one, assuming they're in line with current domain-name price increases generally), eliminating *all* price caps is another story. I would urge ICANN to eliminate this portion of the proposed changes, or at the very least allow for exceptions in instances when purchasers of both new .org domains -- and acquisition of preexisting ones -- can tangibly show (through any of myriad means) that their use of the domains will serve the public good in some capacity. Respectfully, Jeff Kirk