007in
New Member
- Impact
- 14
China and India have nearly same population.
Why Indian companies do not accept high price for domains .expecially .IN domains.
Why Indian companies do not accept high price for domains .expecially .IN domains.
What were the. Cn prices 3 years before?? . Cn has experienced a huge growth over last 3 years.. . IN is warming up.. It's a sure shot extension to succeed.. I also believe IN has potential to perform better than. Cn.. Howevr the wait may be longer... Kindly note IN is meaningful tld.. Cn is a random one, so use case is limited to China.. IN has several use cases.. It's just matter of time...certainly bound to happen and. IN will riseI know, but the difference still bigger than I can imagine
As my experience , .in market like 2008-2009 in China.What were the. Cn prices 3 years before?? . Cn has experienced a huge growth over last 3 years.. . IN is warming up.. It's a sure shot extension to succeed.. I also believe IN has potential to perform better than. Cn.. Howevr the wait may be longer... Kindly note IN is meaningful tld.. Cn is a random one, so use case is limited to China.. IN has several use cases.. It's just matter of time...certainly bound to happen and. IN will rise
As my experience , .in market like 2008-2009 in China.
Perhaps we need wait more time.
I believe the .in registry forbids registering names just to sell, and they forbid certain types of names. So if your names can be taken away at any time how much do you want to risk investing?
Where is .in 1/10 price of .cn ?
From lowest renewals I could check: .in = $8.75/yr and .cn = $9.39/yr
Do you know much lower renewal prices for .in?
.IN Registry will never take massively domains owned by domainers (this would probably kill any extension btw): the confusion comes from the fact that INDRP (the organisation in charge of disputes for .IN domains) is generally not favorable to domainers, but more favorable to end-users (and you have a lot of .IN investors pushing for a reform of INDRP currently, so this may happen in the future).
But .IN Registry has never intended any actions against domainers. Rules are very clear: registrars can't sale domains for a price higher than reg fees, or can't auction domains. But an individual or an organisation that is not a registrar (like Sedo), can sell and auction .IN domains.
The post is about reseller prices of domains, not about reg fees.
Per capita: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal)_per_capitaDid you compare GDP of China and India?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_GDP_(nominal)
But .IN Registry has never intended any actions against domainers. Rules are very clear: registrars can't sale domains for a price higher than reg fees, or can't auction domains. But an individual or an organisation that is not a registrar (like Sedo), can sell and auction .IN domains.
.
Ah- I always thought .in domains can't be sold overtly by any party (reseller, reg, auction house). Knowing it is just registrars that can't do this is a bit of a relief!
Hi that is interesting, thanks. But can anyone post a link to the actual rules themselves? I do know people have registered adult names in .in and then had them forcibly cancelled because the adult terms were not acceptable.
I mean aftermarket priceWhere is .in 1/10 price of .cn ?
From lowest renewals I could check: .in = $8.75/yr and .cn = $9.39/yr
Do you know much lower renewal prices for .in?