I never understand why "domainers" are promoting the drop auctions.. it's just stupid to me.
You yourself have posted about a friend you talked to now outbidding you on your niche and had a whinge he was hitting on your turf.
I think mostly countries use whatever was created initially, and the countires who have implemented shorter versions have an uncomfortable split between the two and a weak namespace, eg india and china.
I don't see how or why auda could justify giving .com.au owners first go. How about they give .net.au owners first go? After all these poor people are the ones who have had to live with a terrible domain.
YEPA big chunk of names worth anything would go to competition in my view.
YEPI think there would be a whole lot of money spent (wasted) on .net.au perhaps, then a whole lot of auctions, with the end result being a halving of value of existing names and an overall weaker namespace.
Lots more reg fees being paid though, and likely a lot of auction money. How money grubbing is AUDA......time will tell.
It's a great way for me to learn, and to promote it publicly is a bit of informative fun. You think it's stupid? Fine.
I wasn't targeting you specifically. It's just the same as creating a great business model where you can make some money, then to go and publish it in the newspaper and the next week wonder why you are not making money from it any more...
At any rate any new players will soon find their way to the drops anyway.
I wasn't targeting you specifically. It's just the same as creating a great business model where you can make some money, then to go and publish it in the newspaper and the next week wonder why you are not making money from it any more.
I agree it's great to see the value of end user sales being promoted, but answer this...
There's a car for sale on a street corner that is valued to you the end user at about $20k. But the for sale sign on it is $5k and you are going to buy it for sure, but the owner says i'll not sell until 1pm tomorrow.
Do you promote this to everyone you can find? Knowing that if you do others will be there at 1pm and offer more and you miss out.
So yes I do think it's stupid, unless you have no intention to buy from the drops ever.
Not stupid for NF or DROP to promote them as it's their profit margin that grows with more bidders.
Sorry for being off topic.
Not sure how best to handle it, but I think there might be a few more cases like this one where both parties miss out and it goes to the drops...
Edit for clarification: I mean whoever is granted the .au domain will probably have it contested by the other party (be it .com.au or .net.au owner) and the resolution would be the same as aforementioned Leader.com.au case, whereby both parties miss out and it goes to the drops to decide.
I think you would have a period where the com.au and the net.au get a chance to express their interest in the .au for a standard reg fee. If only one responds then they get it. If both respond it's a 2-person auction with proceeds going to auDA.
One thing to note is that if this were the case, and if you believed that .au would eventually overtake com.au as the preferred extension, is that buying net.au's today might be a shrewd move. For 1/10th of the price it gives you an equal chance to get the .au at some stage in the future (note the two if's in that statement)
( which negates johno69's excuse that businesses where told to register .net.au) so this sole trader will have to go into a bidding battle for the new .au?
ridiculous !
You sure know how to twist peoples words around and talk some total crap. I've just read back over what I said and at no time did I say what you are again misquoting me on.
It's a fact tim, maybe this was before you knew the world wide web was even there.
.COM was for commercial businesses
.NET was for internet businesses
.ORG was for organisations
But as it's been said time and time again, .com.au & .net.au are the same when it comes to policy. If you for one minute think a large business like carsales would not secure the .net.au then you're more silly than I thought.
You are talking about being scared to suggest your clients spend $20 on protecting their name? Now i've heard it all.
If you think it's ok to run off and register all the .net.au's of well know businesses in an effort to underhandedly make a grab at the .au then you are slimy and will be caught out in the end.
I'm just saying, it's not automatic that it should be handed over to the .com.au owner.
Any major brand would have other measures in place to protect their name anyway.
policy hasn't dictated value
But value should dictate policy?
do you charge your clients wholesale on domains you manage for them? i don't.