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I was more interested in criti
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ques and criticisms of the post that I quoted.
I was kind of hoping for some intelligent economic theories. Wrong room? I guess so.
Because I'm a glutton for punishment... and I'm up at this hour.... lets try this a different way:
This guy has a very negative view. Perhaps it comes from him being mad about an auction. Perhaps he is simply insane. Great. That gets you nowhere.
Whether you want to make personal attacks on him or not, it doesn't get to the core issue. The core issue is the excerpt I posted -- which is not the first time I've seen or heard such a statement.
Lets pretend that Olympia Snowe gets a letter that makes his same points. Lets pretend that she starts looking at this as an economic/trade issue.
What do you write in your letter to *your* senator telling him or her what *your* perspective is? Do you throw a tantrum, call the guy names, or intelligently set forth why domaining is not "purely to squeeze profit from consumer confusion, artificial scarcity, and literal extortion. No actual value has been added to the universe, just a redistribution of money from people who have a valid use for a clear domain to people who registered that clear domain first."
f34
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I guess I'm used to standing at the head of a law school class, where the Socratic method leads to elicitation of occasionally intelligent responses. If you don't think about how to deflect such attacks on your industry, or if you think that simply blaming it on the guy's personal issues will win the argument, you're wrong.
I didn't post it to praise it - nor to simply point at it and say "look at this asshole".
That's not a bad analogy. But, I'm not sure it would completely hold up. There are many differences between real estate and domains. First off, the scarcity of real estate is not artificial -- it is governed by the laws of nature. Even in the days when you could homestead land for free, you had to make use of it.
I've done a little research, and I'm surprised that nobody in the domaining community has actually written anything about how the industry does create value. I suppose a good argument could be made that domains do have a market-driven "value" that is artificially suppressed by ICANN's rules, and the domain aftermarket merely re-injects that natural market state into an unnaturally governed market.
most of your replies seems to suggest that we are not intelligent enough to either understand, comprehend or elaborate, with enough eloquence to satisfy your thirst for an argument which will remind you of being back in school debating with your "homies".
we/i reserve the right to engage and use words to describe how "i/we" feel about the subject on my/our own terms, which in turn describes how "i/we" feel about the rights i/we pay to utilize the domains we have in accordance with the TOS regarding domain registrations set forth by the repective registrars and those entities that govern, administer, and or have jurisdiction over such services.
is that an intellegent enough response for your eyes?
"value of a domain can be exampled in numerous ways, whether it be age or demand for a particular subject, the traffic and revenue it produces and or the amount of time and effort, resources used to acquire it.
for one to have to explain the value of a domain, one could just show the value of the internet...which uses domain names as a means of direction and navigation to get to a specific or general topic, product or service."
quote by me!
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