> > Yup, but the investment into developing suitable land for > leasing is quite high. You don't just "invent" new leases. > Its a poor example here as the overhead of creating new > domain names is much, much lower than developing property and > services to lease. Depends on the property. Many pastoral leases - are basically on un-improved land. It is up to the farmer to install fences, drinking troughs, dams etc. Also a registrant can invest a considerable amount in building brand awareness of a particular domain name, which substantially adds to its market value. So you can sell unimproved domains (e.g those that have never been delegated), or sell domains that have been used for a substantial period of time and have considerable awareness in the community. > > There are also restrictions on what you can and can't do with > your property - for example, zoning restrictions. You can't > pick up some residential land and then lease it out to industry. > This is a fairly close analogy actually. The rules for .com.au (commercial) are different from .id.au (for individuals) You can't transfer these between registrants unless the registrants meet the relevant criteria. The .com.au licence is a right to use for a particular purpose. Regards, BruceReceived on Tue Sep 27 2005 - 00:42:39 UTC
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.3.0 : Sat Sep 09 2017 - 22:00:08 UTC