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Re: [opennic-discuss] OpenNIC Domains Registration Fee - Liberland domains .LL


Chronological Thread 
  • From: Simon Castano <netherland-office AT liberland.org>
  • To: discuss AT lists.opennicproject.org
  • Subject: Re: [opennic-discuss] OpenNIC Domains Registration Fee - Liberland domains .LL
  • Date: Fri, 09 Dec 2016 17:26:16 +0100
  • Organization: Representation of the Free Republic of Liberland in the Netherlands

Thanks again for you kind feedback and please see hereafter some insight.

On 2016-12-08 00:51, Maiyannah Bishop wrote:
For my personal view: I'm not against levying fees or fines if the way
in which they are levied is fair and predictable. My concern is the
potential for abuse with your idea for dispute resolution. An auction
is not an appropriate dispute resolution method, in my opinion.

I can clearly see how auction on renewal could be used as a form of censorship where whomever has money could close down any domain he doesn't like. This is clearly not intended and we will define another mechanism to avoid such abuse.


On 2016-12-07 20:55, spaesani AT mail.com wrote:
Considering liberland may never be recognized as a country I would
suggest going with the fair policy of allowing potential country
code or name TLDs with the understanding and obligation to cede the
tld to new nations upon request.

On 2016-12-08 03:24, Jonah Aragon wrote:
I completely agree with spaesani's approval. I think it would be best
to allow country-hopefuls to apply directly with us with the
understanding that IF a country that isn't theirs is created with the
same two letter code, they'll have to give up their rights to the
zone, and IF they are accepted as a country they have to give all
OpenNIC domain holders the domains they had on the new ICANN delegated
zone. I think those policies would be fair for any countries hoping to
get a TLD on OpenNIC.

Fair enough. We will make this clear in our charter by mentionning that if "LL" is added to ISO3166 and not deleguated to Liberland, Liberland will cede the TLD to whomever has received official delegation.
We also agree that IF we are accepted as a country we will give all OpenNIC domain holders the domains they had on the new ICANN delegated zone.


On 2016-12-08 03:04, Maiyannah Bishop wrote:
As regards a TLD for a new ccTLD, I really think its best they go
through New Nations for this, which we peer with, rather than us
directly.

Mainly answered by Jonah hereafter, nothing to add.

On 2016-12-08 03:24, Jonah Aragon wrote:
Being honest, I can clearly see why Liberland decided to go with us
instead of New Nations. New Nations doesn't seem to have the
decentralized control of T1 servers we have, so they wouldn't be able
to host their own zone. And looking through New Nation's forums, there
seem to be a lot of requests that have been open for years, dating
back to and before 2011. The legitimacy of those requests are indeed
questionable, but I can see why someone on a slightly faster agenda
than "whenever," would be interested in just going with us directly as
we have a larger user base.


On 2016-12-08 03:25, Jonah Aragon wrote:
Well we can't take their TLDs for our own purposes. I'm sure it
wouldn't fit Liberland's needs as a country.

Correct: .lib or .bit have no added value for us. We are aiming for a ccTLD.


On 2016-12-08 04:28, Jonah Aragon wrote:
From a common sense perspective at the moment, it makes no sense to charge
for domains because OpenNIC--while being the largest alt-root--still has no
significant usage in the real world. But OpenNIC as a project should not be
about limiting the rights of TLD operators; and it shouldn't force the
distribution of said earnings among all contributors to the project either.

I could not have said it better. Gratis works nice at the moment but if OpenNIC were to scale I trust that most operator could not affoard high-end / high-capacity and we need to make sure we can scale as appropriate.
Distribution of earning is also arguable. In fact, if Liberland were to bring significant load on OpenNIC infrastructure it would de facto raise the value of all TLD hosted by OpenNIC - we could see OpenNIC as some sort of shopping mall which had only give-away shops, a new shop join the mall but start charging for items, while this new shop is benefiting from the mall infrastructure, give-away shops will see more customer passing in the mall and may in turn charge fees for item there were previously giving away.
It is basic supply and demand economics : supply is actually higher than demand for OpenNIC domain since it doesn't reach a lot of users. We do not say we will bring a lot of traffic but if we manage to charge for domains - which is not even guaranteed - it will mean that demand be high enough for people to pay which in turns implies that supply (server capacity) needs to be increased, as such operators costs increases, up to a point where you cannot do that for free...
On the other hand we are not opposed to a fair compensation system if it makes more sense to OpenNIC community


On 2016-12-08 04:51, vv AT cgs.pw wrote:
I do however, have an issue with people who are always
trying to make something into being about making money.
Working for a living is fine, I have almost 6 decades
of understanding in that regard, so am no newcomer to
the ideas of how one might contribute to society and
get something for oneself in return. In fact this is
why I am questioning the concept of mixing money with
what I see as an altruistic project.

I keep seeing unrealistic dreaming about how someone
plans to compete with ICANN and a significant number of
people will magically decide that they're going to
take a break from Facebook and learn how to change their
DNS entries in their /etc/resolv.conf or however it's
done in their OS. I'll tell you right now. It's not
going to happen. There will be no significant
opportunity for commercialisation or monetisation
magically presenting itself in the OpenNIC ecosystem.

It is not about making money but covering operation expenditure: hardware isn't free, electricity and bandwidth either. We are planning to operate our TLD under a not-for-profit organization where revenue would be reinvested into maintainance, infrastructure and R&D.
Furthermore, we do not plan to compete with ICANN - we actually lobby for delegation - but rather aim for collaboration, interoperability and most of all avoid any single point of failure.


On 2016-12-08 09:16, spaesani AT mail.com wrote:
Affording a tld at the cost of a T1 (my mistake earlier with T2) is
attractive considering icann's  180.000 usd for the application alone 
. Not to mention years waiting for application windows.

ICANN indeed charges 180 k$ for gTLD. ccTLD are simply delegated at no cost as soon as a country is added to ISO3166.
In other words, we are not contacting OpenNIC to save or money or time.


I hope this clarifies our point of view, or rather mince since the above answers were not prepared with prior internal consulting.


Greetings,

---
Simon J. Castaño Segondy
Member of the representation of the Free Republic of Liberland in the Netherlands


On 2016-12-08 00:51, Maiyannah Bishop wrote:
Well, you asked for opinions, and a lot of us have been conditioned
to express them in the form of votes ;)

For my personal view: I'm not against levying fees or fines if the way
in which they are levied is fair and predictable. My concern is the
potential for abuse with your idea for dispute resolution. An auction
is not an appropriate dispute resolution method, in my opinion.

I have no problem with any of your other suggestions.
-mb

On 2016-12-07 17:16, Simon Castano wrote:

We are indeed not calling for any vote at the moment but rather
gathering feedback to prepare our TLD charter, and finally call for
vote to peer .ll domains to OpenNIC. We expect the request to be
sent within six month.

We will prepare our draft policies considering what has been said
and surely ask for opinion sooner or later.
Pricing and renewal mechanism are definitely not final.

Thanks so far,

---
Simon

On 2016-12-07 22:55, Jonah Aragon wrote:

I'm fine with the pricing aspects of the domains during the
registration process. I don't think OpenNIC has to be free and
shouldn't mandate that on their domains, that's unfeasible at a
certain point.

The pricing system is flawed though in ways that could and will
make
it susceptible to abuse when it came time to renew, which I
pointed
out a few days ago. For that reason if this was brought to a vote
I
would also vote no. If Liberland included policies that protected
current domain owners when renewal time came around I would
probably
vote yes.

That's just my opinion. This isn't even being called to a vote
right
now anyways so there's no reason to pick a side.

Jonah



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