Om Wed, 21 Nov 2001 13:05:14 +1100, Dave Hooper wrote: > Hears a solution. Get this industry working for you. On Wed, 21 Nov 2001 13:19:58 +1100, Chris Disspain wrote: > Thanks Dave. That's a good idea . . .but please don't expect > it to happen tomorrow ;-) On Wed, 21 Nov 2001 13:20:59 +1100, Dave Hooper wrote: > That's the whole point. It could probably happen in about an hour if the > will was there. Sadly, I don't think it is. Hi Dave & Chris First, I'd thank Mark Highes and Bruce Tonkin for their recent input. It is always helpful when people with industry competence contribute to the debate. If nothing else it helps to relieve Chris Disspain from having to answer all the questions raised. Sure, auDA is a self regulatory industry body. It is not short of funds in the sense that it levies fees on the industry. Recently, for example, auDA charged a $2,000 "application fee" to each prospective registrar. Multiply that by how many applied and you have an income stream!! [Note. Later on there will be annual accreditation fees.] But how do you set that fee? Grab a number out of the air? Of course, you base it on all sorts of considerations like (a) the expected number of applicants and (b) the amount of work involved in processing those applications. Now as to Mark's comments. Of course anybody can sell domain names. You don't need to be a registrar or a reseller. Clearly there must be some advantage in paying $2,000 application fee to auDA (or you wouldn't do it). As well, any economist (or even any business person) will tell you that a potential domain name seller will decide whether they want to be a "registrar" or "reseller" based on considerations like the cost vs value of each option. That will naturally include the expected number of domain name sales either way. Of course, in some cases, technical considerations influence business choices. But there are many other factors. A sole trader can "sling up a link" in an hour, as Dave Hooper suggests, but an industry reegulatory body needs to give these matters just a little more consideration. I would argue that, for example, there may be some prestige in saying that you are "an auDA accredited registrar". If so, you might want your link to appear on auDA's website. That would be a neat way to pick up traffic. But auDA could still do the reverse and put up a webpage that explains "stuff" to consumers like "who are the bad guys" and "what the dirty tricks are". The trouble is auDA would need to run that past the lawyers first. What happens if a bad guy sues for defamation. Or auDA inadvertently tells other shonks what tricks to play. I'd hate to see the Court case when the shonk was being prosecuted: Question "And how did you think up this nefarious scheme that you perpetrated on the unsuspecting consumer?" Answer "Oh, I found out about it from the auDA website" !! So any suggestion, however, mild it seems, requires a certain amount of thought. Just ask any lawyer in the world. Chris Disspain is, of course, a lawyer. And a very good one too. He can think up a hundred problems before you even finish the sentence. Plus, he really is a very busy person. The applications for new registrars closed on Monday and that for Registries the week before. And there's a whole load of other stuff to do. The answer may not be to "take on more staff" as this is a temporary situation. But I would recommend Chris consider an extra temporary person to assist. So, no Dave, let's not "sling up a webpage" in an hour. However, if you could spare the hour, perhaps you could draft a page with an outline of what you would like to see. Then Chris would have something constructive to work with. And I know that Chris genuinely appreciates input from people in the industry.. Best regards Patrick Corliss Speaking Personally ADDENDUM After I wrote the above, but before I sent it, I saw Chris Disspain's reply along the same lines. I think mine adds another view so I'll send it anyway, -- This article is not to be reproduced or quoted beyond this forum without express permission of the author. 320 subscribers. Archived at http://listmaster.iinet.net.au/list/dns (user: dns, pass: dns) Email "unsubscribe" to dns-request§auda.org.au to be removed.Received on Wed Nov 21 2001 - 07:23:49 UTC
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