WebDigger
Established Member
- Impact
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I'm just curious; who was the very first public domain name registrar and what were the early registration prices like?


I stand corrected. Never heard of them. I'd always dealt with NetSol, but that was in the 90's...The first name registered was Symbolics.com in 1985
I stand corrected. Never heard of them. I'd always dealt with NetSol, but that was in the 90's...
I think you are correct, and Netsol was the first registrar. From Wikipedia.I stand corrected. Never heard of them. I'd always dealt with NetSol, but that was in the 90's...
Network Solutions Inc.(NSI) started as a technology consulting company incorporated by Gary Desler, Ty Grigsby, Emmit J. McHenry, and Ed Peters in Washington D.C. in January 1979.[3] In its first few years, the company focused on systems programming services, primarily in the IBM environment. Annual revenues passed $1 million in 1982, growing to $18.5 million in 1986.
John Dillon reported in MediaFilter.org: "Initially, the service was subsidized by the government. But, in May 1993, the National Science Foundation privatized the name registry (InterNIC - Internet Network Information Center) and paid NSI $5.9 million to administer it. In September 1995, NSI instituted the fee system. A few months earlier, it had been bought out by Science Applications International Corp (SAIC)."
My company was NetSol's exclusive distributor for Poland in the late '90's. They were the gTLD registry cum registrar, all-in-one like. By 1998-1999, before their monopoly ended, their retail pricing was US$35 per year or thereabouts, we had a huge discount as their distributorThe NetSol fees were $100 for two years until the monopoly ended...
To begin with, the www didn't exist in 1985. Domain names were used for E-mail, FTP, telnet and the like. So you didn't register a domain on some website. You had to send a fax usually....If Symbolics.com was registered at Network Solutions (the first registrar) in 1985, then how come NetworkSolutions.com was only registered in 1998?
Yeah, that's how NetSol worked, too. There was an email template to fill out, then send out to register a domain - Admin, Tech, Billing contacts, nameservers and all. Sounds pretty weird looking back from today's perspective, I know. But it was pretty efficient. I remember using this to actually catch some dropping names, worked out pretty well more often than not, too!...Don't even get me started on how they handled the DNS changes. It was all by email. Total gong show.
Yep, same thing at NetSol. They registered the name and gave you 14 days to pay for it. Good ole days!...It's funny to recall that you didn't have to pay up front; they'd bill you later.)



