Sean Finn [sean§teknol.com.au] wrote: > To all in general, not directed at any individuals, again, my 2 cents. > > Its not the fact that they run the perl script. > > Its the fact that they have *proven* their technical ability to run a perl > script. > Agreed to run said script in a fancy fashion, and not to waver too far, > and agreed to be watched and monitored, for example, if their flair for perl > programming gets too fancy and they do something funky but disallowed. They > agree to be axed, or fix up their fancy script to conform again. > > -There has to be an agreement to the next level in the .au foodchain at the > registrar level, > -Someone has to pay for it. > -Someone has to watch it. > > > * Its called becoming a registrar.* > > Proving your technical ability, > Paying for it, (Someone has to ,its commercial after all, not a charity.) > And agreeing to be slapped if you go outside the guidelines. > > If you want that level of control, make it worth auda's while, pay to become > a registrar, and prove your ability. > Its not up to them to pay for it after all. > > If you're not at that level, hook into someone who has, hang off their > coattails, and resell their products. > > Its Harsh. > > Its Commerce. > > Im Sorry. > > My 2 Cents +- 3% Inflation. being a serious about being a registrar is not cheap. Enetica has spent over $.25m on its software alone. the $3000 dollar/year is only a barrier to entry to small players who will only register a few dozen domains a month. the fundamental problem in my mind is the market is too small to support even the current number of registrars. smaller registrars would do a lot better to become virtual registrars and not bother trying to reinvent the wheel. just random thoughts. VicReceived on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.3.0 : Sat Sep 09 2017 - 22:00:06 UTC