Rick W suggested I subscribe and crosspost this into this list. Hopefully you lot have a longer attention span that the hairdressers in aussie-isp and Adam, I got your reply advertising AUSRC as a solution for my proposal already ta. I notice an accc person is on the list so an opinion from thou wouldn't go amiss. The proposition I'm putting forward for debate is simply that the portability or non-portability of 3LD's should be indicated to a prospect _in a proactive manner_. ----- Forwarded message from Alastair Waddell <awaddell§cyberlabs.com.au> ----- What this is about is the promotion of alternate 2LDs in the local market, that is, in competition with com.au and net.au I'd like to introduce some debate, which may even help socially engineer an ethic, around the subject of portability. I believe that if one is to offer a product in competition and _promote it as a viable alternative_ then there are some fundamentals that the provider is _obligated_ to make the consumer aware of. In short, if you are sold a domain as an alternative 3LD, and MIT and connect will love this, then I suggest you've been 'hard done by' if it isn't portable, or if it's non-portability isn't publicised and advice given about it's usefullness once you no longer require services from the seller. To date I'm aware of the active marketing of aust.com aus.com I suggest to any company or individual paying for subdomains of a 2LD where authority for that 3LD cannot be redelegated, that the value of that domain is near to nothing as it is for ever dependent on a maintained relationship with the owner of the 2LD. ie. In the above exampe you may as well have <domain>.ozemail.com for all that it's worth to you; sure it looks more unique, but beyond that simple perception is a reality that is contrary to what consumers might be 'generally expected to assume'. This also suggests a dubious manner, whether intentional or not, of locking a customer into services, which sounds very anti-competitive to me. Given that the principle thrust of marketing of domains is o unique identity o ability to move this identity (web/mail) to any isp I strongly recommend that advertising of domains be subject to guidelines of the Trade Practices Act or equivilent. Certainly the same level of 'watchdogging' that is now being paid to unlimited accounts is equally justified in the monitoring of advertising and marketing of domains. In the Big Picture, domains - their allocation and management are much more worthy of the attention of the ACCC than access accounts. I emailed ozemail and they advised that they couldn't redelegate a subdomain of aust.com. I'm not saying OzEmail are doing anything wrong; I rang a sales droid also (by way of double checking) and they too said the domain wasn't portable (well, actually I couln't make myself understood - they kept coming back to thinking I wanted to redelegate aust.com). Personally I think this lack of magnanimity lacks vision. Regards, -- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Alastair Waddell o Tel +61 3 96 400-400 Technical Administrator o Fax +61 3 9222-1363 CyberLabs o http://www.cyberlabs.com.au Queen Street, Melbourne + Virtual Services + DNS Maintenance + ISP Co-location + Internetworking ---- Email "unsubscribe aussie-isp" to majordomo§aussie.net to be removed. Reminder: Save $50 if you register for ISP.au '98 before 7th June ----- End forwarded message ----- -- ----------------------------------------------------------------------- Alastair Waddell o Tel +61 3 96 400-400 Technical Administrator o Fax +61 3 9222-1363 CyberLabs o http://www.cyberlabs.com.au Queen Street, Melbourne + Virtual Services + DNS Maintenance + ISP Co-location + InternetworkingReceived on Thu May 21 1998 - 10:29:47 UTC
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.3.0 : Sat Sep 09 2017 - 22:00:03 UTC