As a .org domain name registrant, I am concerned about the proposed changes for the .org Registry Agreement. The proposed agreement would remove the price cap provisions in the current agreement. Ostensibly, this change is to "allow the .org renewal agreement to better conform with the base registry agreement" as well as "[treat] the Registry Operator equitably with registry operators of new gTLDs and other legacy gTLDs utilizing the base registry agreement." If we consider the current domain name usage for .com (hear me out, this applies to .org) domains as described at https://singaporedatacompany.com/blog/how-many-domain-names-are-unused, we see that GoDaddy is by far the leader of .com domain name registration, at 33%. The nearest individual competitor has 5.3%.Removing GoDaddy from the top ten, the other nine account for 32%, and the remaining 1,841 registrars account for 35%. If this data can be extrapolated to .org domains, as the action of removing the price cap would seem to indicate, it only serves to keep the dominant, dominant, while the others, who try to remain competitive by keeping the registration costs as low as possible, may well lose their competitive edge, as they will be charged more and have margins and volumes too low to support absorbing the cost themselves. In my opinion it is a mistake to remove the price caps. Perhaps it would be sufficient to treat the .org Registry Operator more equitably, with a change in the structure or amount of the price caps? Sincerely, Henry Longmore