Price fixing can be done for positive or negative - I was talking specifically about prices that were fixed in crisis or relative to need. (For example, raising the price of medicine to beyond what one would consider reasonable remuneration when an illness was spreading).
This is called gauging and is generally illegal. People don't need a domain to live but it is generally considered quite immoral to refuse to sell a person dying of thirst water for less than say $100 because a hurricane wiped out all of the fresh water.
Child labor laws are interesting because the morality is a matter of perspective. I'm talking here about using cheap child labor in an exploitative system. Morality is usually in the eye of the beholder - the west (myself included) look at it generally from an economic standpoint and not an overal general welfare standpoint which means that we can force changes from "bad" to "worse".
I am not following you here. Child labor laws and many other protection laws were not implemented from an economic standpoint (i.e. the economy will be better off if we eliminated exploitation of children) but that it was wrong to do so.
Also, if only economics were considered, slavery would probably have never been eliminated.
[snip]Not really - with the number of people who think doing that was stupid (there are many threads here). Some people think that the answer is "$500 to prove that they really want it" etc.
The act is as meaningful regardless of the underlying asset (though maybe harder to do for some). How hard it is doesn't change that much, imho.
Clearly Ray is a stand up guy... but some of us already knew that.
It sucks when you lose a domain regardless of who's fault it is and it is not generally immoral for the person who gains it to do so.
One of my domains was lost due to having used hotpop for email after having in the late 90s, early 00s gone through several dial-up ISPs due to changes in the pricing and caps on usage, so I started using hotpop for email forwarding.
Well, hotpop all of the sudden stopped its service and I didn't get my renewal notices (partly my fault, partly my email provider's) and my name, a dotcom version of a username I use on many message boards (not officevalue but my name plus a geo) was snapped up by someone who put up a one-page site in Japanese about investing and bicycles or something. Didn't make any sense (and not due to a bad automated translation) but had several redirects to several online stores which I presume are owned by the site owner. Geo was for a place in the US.
Unfortunately, they recently renewed it so I will have to wait another year until it drops. It's not worth a lot more than regfee to me so I doubt I'd ever make an offer.
BTW, even Microsoft has screwed up twice with hotmail.
Good Samaritan squashes Hotmail lapse?
Microsoft Forgets To Renew Hotmail.co.uk
I guess the only way to be sure you get those domain notices is have your own domain for email.