Bacon Farmer
Top Contributor
Nah you get economies of scale and lower costs from those that do innovate and inject resources which is why the tender process works.
I think the issue isn't the fact that the registry was making money, the issue was it was just getting renewed with no competition.
That’s not always possible - even at volume. Our big banks could lower interest rates but have a business to protect - and the volume there is many times our 3mil+change domain names.
And they should have tendered no doubt - but the biggest arguement seems to be wholesale costs need to be lowered.
That’s not always possible - even at volume.
You don’t seem to understand ~$21 mil per year isn’t much when you consider salaries, maintenance, purchasing, research and development etc.. etc..You don't seem to understand the concept of economies of scale.
You keep quoting the same thing from 2009.
You’re literally whinging about $7 a year. Less than $0.02 per day.
While it would be great to have lower costs to register we also need to take into account what it costs IN AUSTRALIA to provide services.
The sad truth is; things in Australia cost more than their US/UK counter parts. And I don’t just mean the domain name in this case, I mean the power, rent (or rates), salaries etc.. etc..
In 8 years - the cost of running a business has risen, not lowered. So even if it had dropped, there would be no option but to increase again (and WOW would this forum blow up then!)
The new registry may be able to lower costs for now - but I’ll bet once they factor in business in Aus they’ll have no choice but to increase again at some point.
Not a single cent. I would BARELY fir the demand side let alone supply.Hi, Thank you for your input.
Do you work for, receive any form of paments or have interests in a supply related entity and can you advise who?
You don’t seem to understand ~$21 mil per year isn’t much when you consider salaries, maintenance, purchasing, research and development etc.. etc..
It’s not like the registry operator can half-ass the security or the operation of said registry.
I welcome the change - keen to see how the new operator handles things at a reduced cost.
Some may be that low.$21 million is actually a heck of a lot of money. It takes 20 people to run the registry, it can probably be done for a few million per year with all the local presence requirements. Look at how low some new tlds are priced, 99 cents, free, etc.
Not a single cent. I would BARELY fir the demand side let alone supply.
I just don’t have the same burning hate for auDA the vocal parts of this forum seem to have.
Some may be that low.
.au isn’t.
I would wager the costs of running the datacentres here is greatly different to hosting in the US or India etc..
Of those $0.99 are they loss-leaders? How is the registry hosting them sustained?
And of course - the security side of things - while .au does have its problems - it’s no where near as scammy as .com
Costs here are quite different to those around the world. $21,000,000 might seem a lot but factoring in all the extra costs (we are in Australia after all) WITH a profit margin - It’s suddenly not that much at all.
I bet they also weren’t paying a pittance to their staff or we’d see more holes than Swiss cheese...
Do you have any relationship at all with any party providing .au services? So we can understand your position on .au wholesale pricing and why you want to keep it high please disclose it.