joshrowe
Top Contributor
In response to your comments:
The monetisation policy is NOT an improvement that legitimised a commercial business model – this is the standard auDA PR line.
What do other members of this forum think?
Did the first monetisation policy:
1. Give more certainty over the previous policy (silent on the legitimate business model of domain monetisation),
2. make things worse or
3. make no difference at all ?
There could be nothing further from reality. The policy you helped implement and continue to support, actually continues to impose the most draconian restrictions that I know of in the whole world (China and Iran don't have these restrictions!)– they severely impact everyone on this forum. It doesn't truly facilitate monetisation except a one liner, which is more for PR than practical effect.
What policy framework do you propose .au uses?
What should the over arching policy objectives be?
I suggest you start with section 6 of this document and modify as you see fit: http://www.auda.org.au/pdf/2007npp-issues-paper.pdf
How will this policy benefit all .au stakeholders (refer above for the domain name industry supply chain).
Have you read Hilde Thunem's research on the types of domain name policy frameworks which exist in various country code top level domains? http://www.norid.no/regelverk/rammer/regelverksmodeller.en.html
Once you have read it, where should .au be on this spectrum, why and what are the benefits to all .au stakeholders?
As a Board member you supported the original restrictions and the 6 month rule, the fact that has been abolished is due to pressure from the domainer community and the good work of people like George, Brett and Ned on the working group;
I supported the removal of prohibition on domain name resale and I support the changes recommended by the Secondary Market Working Group.
This demonstrates that .au policy is not static and can be changed.
Well done Ned, George & Brett.
My experience is that constructive conversation with .au stakeholders and auDA will lead to positive change. However, auDA bashing will just lead to frustration. It's your choice which path you wish to follow.
You seem to imply that the .au policy is no longer restrictive – this is not true, just take a look at .uk and .nz as a comparison, they don't have the restrictions we have;
.au policy is less restrictive than it used to be. I do hold the view that there should be some policy requirements in .au - this gives .au a point of difference that can be commercially exploited by the domain name industry.
What do other members of this forum think?
Should .au be a free for all (like Erhan suggests) or should there be some policy requirements to keep .au different from other domain name spaces?
You and other board members had an opportunity to vote to accept the recommendations of the minority report but you preferred to retain restrictions on monetisation and accept the majority panel, of which you were a member. If I were on the board I would have voted in favour of the minority report;
I suspect you may feel let down by "the process" because your Minority Panel report did not gain the right level of support. However, you shouldn't stop there - I encourage you to constructively understand the needs of all the .au stakeholders so that you can develop policy changes which meet your policy objectives AND those of the broader .au stakeholders.
Ned's work on the Secondary Market Working Group demonstrates how constructive conversation with auDA can lead to policy change.
The Instra and Hitpro cases are two cases in which auDA spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on;
As I said above, if there is a grievance with auDA then there is a formal process to raise issues directly with the board. I will not be making public comments on legal issues associated with auDA.
In the meantime I remind all domainers and small business to come to our networking night on 5 October 2011, details are here, and I am happy to discuss your concerns in person.
Am I included on this invitation?
It would be great to meet people from this forum face-to-face (and to show I don't have red horns on my head).