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Re: domain name zapping threat by Internic
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To: [email protected], [email protected],
[email protected]
Date: Tue Jun 25 10:05:06 1996
The policy implemented about 10 months ago was for a $100 fee to register
new domain names. This was good for two years. Current domain holders
were to be billed $50 each year to maintain their domain names. The
billings for the current domain name holders are now just beginning to be
sent.
> > I saw in an article a claim, I think, that the internic now charges
> > $100 "rent" per year for a domain. this is really amazing to me,
> > because this has totally changed from a one-time only fee, if
> correct.
> > is that correct?
>
> There was never a "one-time" fee. You could register as many domains
> as
> you wanted whenever you wanted (as long as you weren't violating a
> trademark or something like that). Usually people with domains would
> run
> into charges because they needed someone else (usually an ISP) to run
> authoritative nameservers for their domain.
>
> >
> > I wonder if people are going to try to find a way to "route around"
> > this action by the internic... one wonders if this is just the first
> > in a series of actions by the new spook owners. (SAIC) essentially,
> > if someone wanted to implement a tax or a way to control the internet,
> > the NIC would be an excellent place to start.
> >
> > I wonder if the NIC has legal authority to yank DNS address like
> > they are doing. it seems one could take them to court and have
> > a pretty good argument that people who run DNS servers are free
> > to run them however they want, and that ultimately this is what
> > determines how routing on the internet is supported, not some
> > overseeing agency like the NIC.
>
> Nothing stops anyone from running their own name server. However, the
> root
> servers are what 99% of the nameservers out there point at. No one is
> going
> to use dns.joe.schmoe.org as their primary nameserver.
>
>
> >
> > it seems to me that now would be a brilliant time for someone
> > to introduce a "non NIC registration service" that sets up an
> > alternate DNS that guarantees that members will never be charged
> > money. of course that's what the DNS "sort of" started out as...
>
> And then there could be competition, which could potentially create
> some
> bad scenarios. What if one registration service refused to propagate
> their
> domains to other registration services?
>
> --
>
> Shifter
> [email protected]
>
>
Lou Zirko (502)383-2175
Zystems [email protected]
"We're all bozos on this bus" - Nick Danger, Third Eye
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