snoopy
Top Contributor
Finally common sense seems to be prevailing, after years of wasted effort promoting this confusing, rubbish tld. That effort could have gone into promoting the clear winner, .com.au.
"The Panel is inviting stakeholder feedback on closing the .net.au namespace to new registrations, especially given the opening of the .au domain namespace."
https://auda.org.au/assets/Policies/PRP-Issues-Paper-Registrant-Policy-January-2018.pdf
Lastly is auDA about to make exactly the same mistake again with .AU? When .AU fails in the marketplace will auDA then spend its time trying to sell the unsellable just like they did with .net.au and .id.au? Are we facing another Nominet situation?
auDA let's have the courage to scrap what is a bad idea rather than just plowing ahead "because it would embarrassing to turn back". That is what I am hearing from auDA, that people inside auDA now see no benefit at all in direct registrations any more. They now use the word "neutral" and they only keep plowing ahead because they see that as easier than the embarrassment of admitting it was a bad idea.
"The Panel is inviting stakeholder feedback on closing the .net.au namespace to new registrations, especially given the opening of the .au domain namespace."
https://auda.org.au/assets/Policies/PRP-Issues-Paper-Registrant-Policy-January-2018.pdf
Lastly is auDA about to make exactly the same mistake again with .AU? When .AU fails in the marketplace will auDA then spend its time trying to sell the unsellable just like they did with .net.au and .id.au? Are we facing another Nominet situation?
auDA let's have the courage to scrap what is a bad idea rather than just plowing ahead "because it would embarrassing to turn back". That is what I am hearing from auDA, that people inside auDA now see no benefit at all in direct registrations any more. They now use the word "neutral" and they only keep plowing ahead because they see that as easier than the embarrassment of admitting it was a bad idea.