Interestingly this discussion seems to have reverted to the age-old question of... "What does the market want?" Whatever handle we choose to place on Domain Names... A Directory Service... Not a Directory Service... Useful for locating businesses... not useful because people use Search Engines etc. etc.... is superfluous... the bottom line is that Domain Names are a saleable commodity, the value of which is ruled by market influences. It doesn't matter what rules we place on these names, because the market will decide whether or not they offer value for money. The only impact of any rule on commercial property is to attempt to influence market acceptance... yes we like the rules so we will buy an .au domain... or no, we don't like the rules so we will buy a .com or something else. The challenge of those developing the rules is to decide what the market wants, and hence they are clearly working in the area of marketing - not "business ethics" or any other type of social reform. The ethical debate (on what domain names should or should not be used for) is certainly interesting from an academic perspective, however it is hardly likely to influence the masses considering purchasing a domain. So where is the market analysis?... where is the trend analysis?... Who is conducting market surveys?... What does the market really want, and what does it buy now? As an exercise in market acceptance, I would like to ask the permission of this list to conduct an experiment. auDA is now a recognised domain with prominance on the world's Search Engines (even though auda.net is running a close second). What would happen if a web page were to be placed on the net, identified only by an IP address, yet including a title such as "auDA - Click Here" (with a link to auda.com.au so there is nothing improper about the site). The site to also include Keywords and robot metatags such as "auda, australia, domain registration" etc. etc. - Again, nothing improper about doing this. What if the site were then promoted on the world's search engines using a few of the "tricks of the trade" we are all familiar with.... which site would get the most hits? - the one with the recognised domain name? or the one identified only by an IP address, yet publicly promoted? If this were to be a viable test obviously both sites would need to provide an audit of hits visible to anyone... is this worth a try? PS - Whilst on the auDA web site... guys, what gives? the site appears twice in a browser... it's as though someone had updated the site by simply copying and pasting the entire content onto the top of the page, yet leaving the old stuff on the bottom (if you scroll down the page you will see what I mean), plus double title tags at the top, and an end html tag half-way down... the first time I loaded the page it crashed my browser... the second time it worked, but messy... CYA, DonReceived on Wed Feb 21 2001 - 10:26:23 UTC
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