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posted by takyon on Monday February 24 2020, @09:07PM   Printer-friendly
from the assigned-names-expensive-numbers dept.

Get ready for price hikes up to 10% annually after sale of .org registry:

The nonprofit Internet Society attracted widespread condemnation late last year after announcing it was going to sell off the Public Interest Registry, a subsidiary that administers the .org domain, to a private equity firm called Ethos Capital. People were particularly alarmed because the move came shortly after ICANN removed price caps on registration and renewal fees for .org domains. That opened the prospect of big price hikes in the coming years.

In a Friday press release, Ethos Capital announced it would voluntarily commit to limit price hikes for the next eight years. But under the new rules, Ethos Capital would still be able to raise prices by 10 percent a year—which would more than double prices over the next eight years. Ethos framed this as a concession to the public, and strictly speaking, a 10 percent price hike limit is better for customers than completely uncapped fees. But 10 percent annual increases are still massive—far more than inflation or plausible increases in the cost of running the infrastructure powering the .org registry.

For comparison, ICANN recently announced that Verisign, the company that administers the .com domain, will be allowed to raise prices by 7 percent per year over the next decade, except for a two-year "pause" after four years of hikes. Those changes, adding up to a 70-percent price hike over 10 years, was enough to trigger alarm among domain registrars who must pass these fees on to their customers.

Ethos Capital's proposed limits are also much more than historical increases in the .org fee. The maximum fee charged by the Public Interest Registry for a domain registration has risen from $6 at the end of 2006 to $9.93 today—an annual growth rate of less than 5 percent.

Previously: Now Internet Society Told to Halt Controversial .Org Sale... by its Own Advisory Council


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  • (Score: 4, Interesting) by FatPhil on Tuesday February 25 2020, @01:32AM

    by FatPhil (863) <{pc-soylent} {at} {asdf.fi}> on Tuesday February 25 2020, @01:32AM (#962143) Homepage
    you might not be old enough to remember that in the early days, domain name registration was free. NetSol were only given a mandate that let them charge for the service in 1995. NetSol were even worse than Verisign, verisign are now just desperate as they know they are only guaranteed to make money from the business unit where they've got a monopoly, so they're clinging to it for dear life, and going to squeese it intil there's no blood left in the fatted golden goose. Yes, their business plan is as mangled as my metaphor.
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