> NS cranked up rates so high that complaints from industry were a big factor
Maybe complaints from domain squatters. I wish domains still cost $100/year. Before that, you had to know Jon Postel to get one. If everyone can buy something for 50 cents then it doesn't have a whole lot of prestige anymore. If a domain costs 50 cents then all you're doing is attracting the sorts of people who only want to contribute 50 cents of value. What would have happened if that had been the government's policy during the western homesteading era? Expensive means the people who buy will be likely to use rather than squat. Expensive means you could get a good domain without having to buy from random guy. Expensive means people become more creative with the way they use domains. For example, I thought it was cool the way universities used to buy a single top-level domain, and then delegate sub-domain authority to departments, and they could delegate fourth level labels. That can't happen anymore because browser security policies evolved under the assumption that second level domains are cheap so it's no longer possible to have meaningful boundaries within a domain. So because of speculation we have a more fragile internet.
I also remember those dark days of having to use those temperamental and brittle email forms. I also remember how the turn around time was measured in days. Better hope you didn’t make any mistakes!
My first few domain names were registered in 1995 when the turn-around time on the email template was about three weeks. I barely missed registering kl.com. There was a minor error on my template (name servers). Three weeks later I got the error message and immediately resubmitted but someone else had also submitted a registration in the meantime and theirs was processed before mine. I had to settle for kl.net.
Maybe complaints from domain squatters. I wish domains still cost $100/year. Before that, you had to know Jon Postel to get one. If everyone can buy something for 50 cents then it doesn't have a whole lot of prestige anymore. If a domain costs 50 cents then all you're doing is attracting the sorts of people who only want to contribute 50 cents of value. What would have happened if that had been the government's policy during the western homesteading era? Expensive means the people who buy will be likely to use rather than squat. Expensive means you could get a good domain without having to buy from random guy. Expensive means people become more creative with the way they use domains. For example, I thought it was cool the way universities used to buy a single top-level domain, and then delegate sub-domain authority to departments, and they could delegate fourth level labels. That can't happen anymore because browser security policies evolved under the assumption that second level domains are cheap so it's no longer possible to have meaningful boundaries within a domain. So because of speculation we have a more fragile internet.