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Re: [gnso-vi-feb10] Competition authorities
- To: Gnso-vi-feb10@xxxxxxxxx
- Subject: Re: [gnso-vi-feb10] Competition authorities
- From: Richard Tindal <richardtindal@xxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 26 Apr 2010 17:36:05 -0400
In today's email I was talking about the actual registry, not the back-end
provider.
As with the JN2 proposal, I think the only time a back-end provider should be
treated like the registry itself is when the back-end provider has control over
policies and/or pricing.
RT
On Apr 26, 2010, at 5:28 PM, Eric Brunner-Williams wrote:
> On 4/26/10 4:23 PM, Richard Tindal wrote:
>>
>> I think this is a scenario JN2 are trying to address in their proposal.
>>
>> Under the CORE, Afilias and PIR proposals, a large domain reseller, let's
>> say Yahoo, could become the registry for .WEB and still offer .WEB names
>> to consumers. Yahoo would simply become a reseller for WEB, buying names
>> from an unaffiliated registrar at a fraction above the registry price.
>> This would give Yahoo the effective market presence of a registrar, even
>> though they were only a reseller.
>
> I confess I missed this in our last off-list Q&A.
>
> RT: if WEB LLC (not owned by eNom) is the registry for .WEB can eNOM
> be the back-end registry provider?
>
> EB: Yes.
>
> (here Yahoo is the hypothetical back-end registry provider, rather
> than eNom)
>
> EB: Try .cat (.web), PuntCat (WEB LLC) and CORE-Registrar (eNom).
>
> RT: If so, can eNom be accredited and sell WEB names?
>
> EB: No. See .cat (.web), PuntCat (WEB LLC) and CORE-Registrar (eNom).
>
> EB: CORE could sell .cat, but we don't because we can see where the
> conflicts could arise.
>
> (here, in Yahoo having a $6 true cost advantage over all other parties
> engaging ultimately in registrations of .WEB)
>
> So I suggest there is a slip of the pen, at least for the CORE model
> being one which allows the nickle price of self-dealing. I'll let
> Brian and Kathy examine their proposals to see if they think they've
> caught the nickle self-deal. Alternatively, show me how to construct
> the nickle exploit under CORE's proposal, as that will be a surprise.
>
>> For example, if the registry price was $6.00 Yahoo could probably buy names
>> from an unaffiliated registrar for $6.05. Even though Yahoo the reseller
>> paid $6.05 per name, $6.00 of this flowed back to Yahoo the registry, and
>> so Yahoo would have the presence of a registrar for an incremental cost of
>> only $0.05 per name.
>
> The example has fundamental value, not just showing how to set up the
> nickle exploit. The true cost of domains in bulk is pennies over the
> wholesale price. Of course, this is only of interest to parties that
> traffic in domains in bulk.
>
> Eric
>
>> The JN2 position is that Yahoo could create the same potential harms as a
>> .WEB reseller they could create as a .WEB registrar, hence JN2 seek to
>> treat these affiliated resellers like affiliated registrars for the first 18
>> months of TLD operation.
>>
>> RT
>>
>>
>> On Apr 26, 2010, at 10:28 AM, Antony Van Couvering wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Yes, in general I think this is the out -- become a reseller of a
>>> registrar, which is not a registrar, and go from there. This may not be
>>> ideal for some, however, and is probably not a long-term solution for
>>> many...
>>>
>>> Thanks Tim,
>>>
>>> Antony
>>>
>>> On Apr 25, 2010, at 8:03 PM, Tim Ruiz wrote:
>>>
>>>> Antony, I am sure we could help them get something going through our
>>>> reseller program, either turnkey or API. Then they can put it where ever
>>>> they want on their own drop down. The only catch is they may need to do
>>>> some of their own translation for the site.
>>>>
>>>> Tim
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> -------- Original Message --------
>>>> Subject: Re: [gnso-vi-feb10] Competition authorities
>>>> From: Antony Van Couvering <avc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
>>>> Date: Wed, April 21, 2010 7:13 pm
>>>> To: Avri Doria <avri@xxxxxxx>
>>>> Cc: Gnso-vi-feb10@xxxxxxxxx
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Because there are likely to be -- if this doesn't take so long that
>>>> everyone's completely exhausted, morally and financially, before the new
>>>> gTLD round starts -- small registries that are simply not going to be
>>>> interesting to registrars (because of their size), or for which existing
>>>> registrars will not be appropriate (because they don't support the
>>>> registry's language, for instance). In these cases, it makes perfect
>>>> sense to have a registry and registrar integrated.
>>>>
>>>> This is the case for many small ccTLDs, for instance, and they are a
>>>> good case in point. Even if (to pick on them) GoDaddy does decide to
>>>> carry .bt (Bhutan), it will be pretty hard to get to (low on a drop-down
>>>> list), and it certainly won't be in the Bhutanese language or alphabet.
>>>> That same dynamic will apply for .zulu or .kurd or .berber.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Apr 21, 2010, at 5:11 AM, Avri Doria wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Why do people think that there will lots of application that include
>>>>> cross-ownership? for example in AVC message I felt like this was going to
>>>>> be a road block for every poor little new registry and I did not
>>>>> understand that.
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>
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