I can confirm this is a long held view.  So I say again, you may not see a successful contradiction of fact. 

However, consider the role vanity could play as a useful explanation? 

In another context, an astute congressman from Texas once remarked that if you could not look a man in the eye, take his money, drink his liquour and 'consort' with his wife and still vote against him, you have no business being in Congress.

Maybe just a tad in the outer band of the congressman's moral compass.  But in my view one could have no right being a serious domainer if you couldn't sell one of them suckers....'em, I mean registrants, a memorable domain.

Carlton


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Carlton A Samuels
Mobile: 876-818-1799
Strategy, Process, Governance, Assessment & Turnaround

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On Mon, 19 Dec 2022 at 13:50, Evan Leibovitch via CPWG <cpwg@icann.org> wrote:
Anyone who hasn't yet conditioned themselves to tune out my previous posts should know my concern that the biggest threat to ICANN's memorable-domain house-of-cards is not from bullshit schemes like blockchain domains. The threat has been from Google and other search engines. Every time someone searches a word, or a brand, or a concept in a search engine, they're not using a domain. The whole DNS could be human-unreadable and single-TLD and most people wouldn't care.

I consider ICANN's greed-induced proliferation of "memorable" domains to be second generation technology of how people find things on the Internet. First-gen was the likes of Gopher, Yahoo and AltaVista. And third-generation are Bing and Google, moderately context and location aware, but a massive step up from using the DNS for search.


Evan Leibovitch, Toronto Canada
@evanleibovitch / @el56
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