The dotAsia Debacle

Posted in Conspiracies, Controversies, Domains | (12) Comments

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Well tbh, I don’t subscribe to TLD bashing. Its a common enough pass time for trolls and others alike on most boards. Some people do it to downplay competition, some coz they want to push something else, some coz its just fashionable to kick something when its down. But a really small percentage do it for educating the sheep (aka followers) who’re being led down the garden path by people with vested interests (not to mention huge holdings) in a particular TLD.

sheep Some of the hype and hoopla on some TLDs really hurts some new domainers and wannabe investors. Its the guys who put in the rent money or the kids college education fund in these domains who really lose the shirt off their backs at times. Because they buy as its ‘hot’ hoping to sell to some sucker who doesn’t know better. The problem is most of the times they’re the ’suckers’ and they don’t even know it.

Take .ASIA for example. (A few people asked my views on .asia, here they are)

Theres a mammoth scam going on at the moment. Some real smart businessmen have come out with the ultimate ponzi scheme. A legal way to rip people off. They realized they couldn’t get a leg up on .com or any other established TLD - so they created a nonsensical, non targetted, unusable extension for ’speculative’ purposes.

How its done:

  • Build the hype.
  • Reserve 10,000 or so top ones (the only ones to actually eventually make good ROI) to milk later for higher amounts through auctions.
  • Get a few hundred suckers to buy the domains in large quantities or at least pre-order them
  • Get another 1,000 sheep who’ll follow those suckers.
  • Show about 50k names as ‘multiple registrants’ and send them to auction
  • Add mysterious non-regs or predated regs to show ‘viability’
  • I’m not even going to go in-depth on the on the ‘available domains’ that are suddenly not available, cancelled orders, rigging or sale of tms here, suffice to mention them.
  • Then lead in the sheep for the slaughter. Sell them whatever you can, however you can. Leave them holding the bag, while they laugh all the way to the bank.

You have to give them something though, the execution is impeccable. Even mTLD looked like amateurs when it comes to comparison with dotAsia milking the extension. They’ve been slick, smart and licked the cream clear off before offering the cone to the gullible lot.

The whole logic of this extension is totally wrong:

  • There is no Asia aside from the continent. Only americans and some Brits even call all the people from the subcontinent that. No local considers themselves as ‘Asian’… Chinese, yes; Indian, yes; Pakistani, yes; Russian, yes; Afghan, yes; Malay, yes; Phillipino, yes; Thai, yes. WTF is an Asian?
  • Its as viable as .nsam would be - lets club americans, canadians, mexicans, columbians, brazilians and a few dozen other nationalities. Would it work? If your answer is no, why is it yes for .Asia?
  • Since people living in Asia are so nationalistic (try clubbing Chinese and Japanese and you’ll know what I mean) what is the need for a separate TLD? The chances of an Asian Union or anything that resembles it are less than that of a snowball in hell.
  • Almost 100% of the countries here have border or cultural disputes with their neighbouring countries, without resolution of that there is a certain degree of hostility between these and being clubbed together is not going to work.
  • There is no single currency for this region, unlike for .eu, and we know what happened with that one also, same cycle - hype, hoopla, con and crash.
  • There are very few ‘asia’ level companies, either they’re national or worldwide, I don’t see those who target only the continent. And even if there are a few, is a gTLD worth the effort?
  • There are a lot of other TLDs that have gone down the same route, especially 4 letter extensions - .mobi, .info .name and of course .eu, .sc, .cc and even .us to some extent.
  • Only about 7% of the names registered in total will ever be worthwhile and of those a large percentage are .com, followed by well known gTLDs (.net/.org) and some ccTLDs (.co.uk, .de, .in). .Asia comes up on the list last, if at all.

What’s even more amazing is that people are booking names in .asia where the .com is still available. Reality check - a domain does not become valuable just because you registered it. So good luck to .asia investors, I really hope you make a million with your names, but wouldn’t count on it.

The Great American Snowe Job

Posted in Conspiracies, Controversies, Domains, Internet, Media, News, Politics, Technology, Webmasters | (3) Comments

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A new bill currently seeking passage in the US senate is trying to surreptitiously change the face of the domain industry and extend American ‘ownership’ on the web. You and me stand to lose any domain we own, developed, undeveloped, tm-ed, non-tm-ed, geo and generic… I kid you not.

Be prepared to protect or lose your domain names, generics or any others, specially if they’re .com or .net as those are controlled by Verisign. The bill goes way beyond its brief… if it becomes law, a lot of small business will be hurt and badly.

As I understand it… if you own a developed domain with an international tm, yet an American company manages to get a tm or even uses the term as a ‘mark’… it can file a civil suit against you for the domain name - bypassing udrp and wipo completely.

Straight for the jugular… backed by the rich daddies at Cadna.org - A straight attempt at ‘reverse domain hijacking’ by the big companies themselves, trying to make a buck of the work of small investors and entrepreneurs worldwide.

Specially when you consider the title of the bill and then read the fine print.

Really hope that US representatives read before they vote, this could erode almost $10 billion of wealth from individuals and companies, mostly in the US. Not to mention huge losses of business for the pillars of the internet, registrars, developers, ad companies, service providers and even ISPs.

Foreign domainers / registrars are not exempt in the case of the two tlds under threat - .com and .net for the simple reason that the registry Verisign is a US corporation subject to US laws.

What can you do to fight it?

Join the ICA

Join the discussion at DNForum

Join the discussion at NamePros

Digg the article

Make people aware - We need lots of people to send letters to organizations, grassroots movements, and media making them aware of this issue. If we can get more organizations to pick up the fight the better chance we have of getting this bill revised or shot down entirely. (by NameCharger)

Here’s the meat of the story -

Another factor would be whether the person had offered to sell the domain name to any third party “without having used…the domain name in the bona fide offering of goods and services”, a provision that appears to be aimed directly at “parked” websites consisting solely of advertising links.

Again, despite the bill’s title, none of these trademark-related provisions contain any requirement that the domain name and website had actually been utilized to facilitate a criminal “phishing” scheme. They address essentially the same harms for which the UDRP and ACPA already provide remedies, but in a more expansive manner with the registrant at greater legal disadvantage and subject to harsher penalties.

In cases filed by the FTC, FCC, and state officials, cease and desist orders and injunctions could be obtained without any requirement to allege, much less prove, that the domain name registrant had actual or implied knowledge of likely misleading effect.

For those of you who’d rather do their own research -

Here’s the bill

And the ICA reaction

And an interesting article by dnw on the ramifications (read the comments too)

Here’s what C|Net has to say about it

And one more article

As the domaining world wakes up to the phenomenon, we have more reactions -

By John Levine at CircleID

TheDomains article explains with Enom’s ‘cuba’ domains example

Jaikumar Vijayan for ComputerWorld

The kind of letters you’d be receiving if this became law

A sad day for the internet if this gets passed as it is. Lets hope and pray not

What do YOU think?

Posted in Conspiracies, Controversies, News, Politics | No Comments

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This is pretty much the entire discussion dav3 initiated and I replied to.

Saddam Hussein offered to step down and go into exile one month before the invasion of Iraq, it was claimed last night. Fearing defeat, Saddam was prepared to go peacefully in return for £500million ($1billion).The extraordinary offer was revealed yesterday in a transcript of talks in February 2003 between George Bush and the then Spanish Prime Minister Jose Maria Aznar at the President’s Texas ranch. Full Article Here

the lives lost and expense in HUNDREDS of billions of dollars spent pursuing the war in Iraq, one wonders, if true, why we didn’t take Saddam up on his offer?

This was the opening post by ‘Dav3′, below are my reply -

Countries really should NOT negotiate with terrorists…irrespective of their faith / country / influence. The results of letting dangerous people go has always been bad for the world. Terrorists let off by one country, to save however many lives, cause harm to that country and to other countries.

People guilty of mass murder can only be given a death sentence. Negotiating with them is morally reprehensible. And no country / government / people should even be seen negotiating with them

And if people start believing they can get away with anything, we set the stage for a worldwide state of chaos and anarchy.
Read the rest of this entry »

Gun Ownership in India

Posted in Conspiracies, Controversies, India, Philosophy | No Comments

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I make no claim to writing this article or any part thereof. This post was found as a reply to a question on Yahoo! Answers. The ‘I’ mentioned in the article below is a a a who has actually written the post. To read the complete question and answer session please visit the following URL - http://in.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20070325065725AAH1eY4

This however, for me, makes riveting reading. As convincing an argument as I’ve ever heard against gun control in India. And an insightful commentary to how the Indian political setup views the average population. However, do keep in mind that, in India, states with a high proliferation of guns are quite violent and backward. On a lighter note - removing gun control restrictions could ease the population problem considerably!

So read on my dear friend, leave your comments on it if you would like to make relevant observations about politics, politicians, guns, freedom, right to self defense, etc.

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Colonial Roots of Gun-Control
I live in India and I am a proud firearm owner - but I am the exception not the norm, an odd situation in a country with a proud martial heritage and a long history of firearm innovation. This is not because the people of India are averse to gun ownership, but instead due to Draconian anti-gun legislation going back to colonial times.

To trace the roots of India’s anti-gun legislation we need to step back to the latter half of the 19th century. The British had recently fought off a major Indian rebellion (the mutiny of 1857) and were busy putting in place measures to ensure that the events of 1857 were never repeated. These measures included a major restructuring of administration and the colonial British Indian Army along with improvements in communications and transportation. Meanwhile the Indian masses were systematically being disarmed and the means of local firearm production destroyed, to ensure that they (the Indian masses) would never again have the means to rise in rebellion against their colonial masters. Towards this end the colonial government, under Lord Lytton as Viceroy (1874 -1880), brought into existence the Indian Arms Act, 1878 (11 of 1878); an act which, exempted Europeans and ensured that no Indian could possess a weapon of any description unless the British masters considered him a “loyal” subject of the British Empire.

An example of British thinking in colonial times:
“No kingdom can be secured otherwise than by arming the people. The possession of arms is the distinction between a freeman and a slave. He, who has nothing, and who himself belongs to another, must be defended by him, whose property he is, and needs no arms. But he, who thinks he is his own master, and has what he can call his own, ought to have arms to defend himself, and what he possesses; else he lives precariously, and at discretion.” –James Burgh (Political Disquisitions: Or, an Enquiry into Public Errors, Defects, and Abuses) [London, 1774-1775]

And thoughts (on this subject) of the man who wanted to rule the world:
“The most foolish mistake we could possibly make would be to allow the subject races to possess arms. History shows that all conquerors who have allowed the subject races to carry arms have prepared their own downfall by so doing. Indeed, I would go so far as to say that the supply of arms to the underdogs is a sine qua non for the overthrow of any sovereignty.” — Adolf Hitler (H.R. Trevor-Roper, Hitler’s Table Talks 1941-1944)

The leaders of our freedom struggle recognised this, even Gandhi, the foremost practitioner of passive resistance and non-violence, had this to say about the British policy of gun-control in India:

“Among the many misdeeds of the British rule in India, history will look upon the Act depriving a whole nation of arms, as the blackest.” — Mahatma Gandhi (An Autobiography OR The story of my experiments with truth, by M.K. Gandhi, p.238)

Post Independence
India became independent in 1947, but it still took 12 years before this act was finally repealed. In 1959 the British era Indian Arms Act, 1878 (11 of 1878.) was finally consigned to history and a new act, the Arms Act, 1959 was enacted. This was later supplemented by the Arms Rules, 1962. Unfortunately this new legislation was also formulated based on the Indian Government’s innate distrust its own citizens. Though somewhat better than the British act, this legislation gave vast arbitrary powers to the “Licensing Authorities”, in effect ensuring that it is often difficult and sometimes impossible for an ordinary law abiding Indian citizen to procure an arms license.

“A system of licensing and registration is the perfect device to deny gun ownership to the bourgeoisie.” — Vladimir Ilyich Lenin

Also the policy of throttling private arms manufacturing was continued even after independence. Limits on the quantity and type of arms that could be produced by private manufacturers were placed - ensuring that the industry could never hope to be globally competitive and was instead consigned to producing cheap shotguns, of mostly indifferent quality, in small quantities. A citizen wishing to purchase a decent firearm depended solely on imports, which were a bit more expensive but vastly superior in quality.

More Recently
This changed towards the mid to late 1980s, when the Government, citing domestic insurgency as the reason, put a complete stop to all small arms imports. The fact that there is no documented evidence of any terrorists ever having used licensed weapons to commit an act of terror on Indian soil seems to be of no consequence to our Government. The prices of (legal & licensed) imported weapons have been on an upward spiral ever since - beating the share market and gold in terms of pure return on investment. Even the shoddy domestically produced guns suddenly seem to have found a market. Also since the Government now had a near monopoly on (even half-way decent) arms & ammunition for the civilian market, they started turning the screws by pricing their crude public sector products (ammunition, rifles, shotguns & small quantities of handguns) at ridiculously high rates - products that frankly, given a choice no one would ever purchase.

“That rifle on the wall of the labourer’s cottage or working class flat is the symbol of democracy. It is our job to see that it stays there.” — George Orwell, the author of Animal Farm and 1984, himself a socialist
Why Citizens Need to be Armed

Curtailing gun ownership, to curb violent crime, through denying licenses or making legal arms & ammunition ridiculously expensive is based on flawed reasoning. The fact is that licensed firearms are found to be used in a statistically insignificant number of violent crimes, motorcycles & cars are far more dangerous. The certainty that a potential victim is unarmed is an encouragement to armed criminals. Less guns, more crime. Most violent crimes involving firearms are committed using untraceable illegal guns. Terrorists or the mafia are not going to be deterred by gun-control laws, they will be willing and able to procure arms of their choice and use them to commit crimes irrespective of any laws. Ironically in India it is cheaper (by several times) to buy the same gun in the black market than it is to buy it legally!

“Gun control? It’s the best thing you can do for crooks and gangsters. I want you to have nothing. If I’m a bad guy, I’m always gonna have a gun. Safety locks? You’ll pull the trigger with a lock on, and I’ll pull the trigger. We’ll see who wins.” — Sammy “The Bull” Gravano, Mafia hit man

“The supposed quietude of a good man allures the ruffian; while on the other hand, arms, like laws, discourage and keep the invader and the plunderer in awe, and preserve order in the world as well as property. The same balance would be preserved were all the world destitute of arms, for all would be alike; but since some will not, others dare not lay them aside…Horrid mischief would ensue were one half the world deprived of the use of them…” — Thomas Paine, Thoughts on Defensive War in 1775

And from the world’s gentlest human being:
“If someone has a gun and is trying to kill you, it would be reasonable to shoot back with your own gun.” — The Dalai Lama, (May 15, 2001, The Seattle Times) speaking at the “Educating Heart Summit” in Portland, Oregon, when asked by a girl how to react when a shooter takes aim at a classmate

It is, of course, no coincidence that the right to have guns is one of the earlier freedoms outlined in U.S.A.’s Bill of Rights. Without guns in the hands of the people, all the other freedoms are easily negated by the State. If you disagree with that statement, ask yourself if the Nazis could have gassed millions of Jews, had the Jews been armed with rifles and pistols–there weren’t enough SS troops to do the job. Lest we forget, in the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of 1944, a couple of hundred Jews armed with rifles and homemade explosive devices held off two fully-equipped German divisions (actually about 8,000 men) for nearly two months.

Closer home take the case of the Godhra carnage and the anti-Sikh riots of 1984. Would wanton mobs have slaughtered so many innocent people with such disregard to consequences if their potential victims had been armed and ready to defend themselves? A serious consideration should be given to an armed civilian population as a solution to religious and racial riots as well as other crimes. Since all criminals are instinctively driven by self-preservation allowing legal ownership of firearms by law abiding citizens would act as a serious deterrent. This will make sure that if the Govt. fails to do its duty to protect the life and liberty of its citizens (as it has so often done in India’s recent past), citizens will be able to protect themselves. I’ll take some potential objections and try to answer them:

Arguments & Counter-Arguments
Q1. Won’t legal owners of arms use the firearms to kill and murder others?
Ans. When a man holds a rifle, he becomes almost godlike: suddenly, he has the ability to deal death and injury to another over a considerable distance–to send, as it were, a thunderbolt of Zeus. For some men, unquestionably, this power is going to be abused, just as some men will always drive a fast car at reckless speeds. For the vast majority of men, however, this power produces precisely the opposite effect: they are humbled by the power they hold, and they become more responsible in its use. That is why, in a nation like the United States with well over seventy million gun owners, only a tiny fraction, less than half a tenth of one percent, use a gun to commit a crime each year. Also since the firearms would be registered with the Govt. along with the owners address, the type of the firearm, its serial number etc. Those (the criminals) who want to commit crimes will not and DO NOT bother to purchase firearms legally and register them. They can and do buy them from the black market (at a fraction of the cost of a legal firearm, I might add). Legal ownership will allow law abiding citizens to protect their and others life and property.

Q2. Won’t there be a free for all during riots?
Ans. By definition riots ARE free for all. However, very few people will participate in riots knowing that a large number of law abiding citizens own firearms in the area. This will actually prevent riots. Riots are mostly started by miscreants (unscrupulous politicians?) who want to benefit from the chaos of riots. However, the risk (loss of life or limb) for the miscreant in starting and/ or participating in such riots, when a large number of the general civilian population owns legal firearms, is significant. Therefore in most cases miscreants will not dare to start riots in the first place.

Q3. What about domestic violence and firearms?
Ans. Domestic violence has nothing to do with firearm ownership. Firearms are merely a tool — not the cause of violence, to quote a famous NRA slogan “Guns don’t kill people, people kill people”. Women in India face domestic violence even today with very limited legal gun ownership. If anything, legal firearms in the hands of women might help even the odds — by removing the physical weakness of women from the equation.

Q4. What about accidents?
Ans. More people in India get killed in automobile accidents than firearm accidents. In countries where gun ownership rates are high like the United States (which has a firearm to population ratio of approx 96:100, i.e., almost 1 firearm for every man woman & child), Switzerland, New Zealand etc. several times more people die in road accidents than from firearm accidents. Firearm accidents can be further minimised by making a gun-safety course mandatory before a permit is issued - so long as this is not used as another excuse to delay or deny permits.

Q5. What about firearm assisted suicides?
Ans. A suicidal person has many different available ways to end his/ her life. Firearms are just another means for him/ her. Statistically suicide rates have little correlation with firearm ownership patterns. Many countries with strict anti-gun legislation have high suicide rates and vice versa.

Q6. Are there any working systems and what are the results?
Ans. Yes, for example in U.S.A., Switzerland, New Zealand. One must note here that different states in US have different degrees of gun ownership and firearm restrictions. Interestingly the states with more restrictions on gun ownerships have a higher crime rate than those that are less restrictive.

I do not condone violence or a violent solution to problems, but there can be no justification for not letting people be prepared to defend their own and their families’ lives and property. When one is surrounded by mobs bent on setting you on fire and the like, in a country where policing is non-existent, owning firearms by people will have a great deterrent effect on mobs. Of course, if I could sue the police for not giving me complete protection, then I might feel differently (but don’t count on it). But by law the State cannot be at fault for not protecting its citizens — so if the cops take 25 minutes (or several hours) to respond to your call, and in those 25 minutes a criminal kicks open your door, shoots you and your wife, rapes your 11-year-old daughter, and beats your baby to death, that’s just tough luck. What about incidents like 1984 and Godhra, where the local administration and police wilfully neglected their duty to protect the citizens of this country?

Please also read the entertaining Parable of the Sheep for an explanation so simple that even a child can understand it.

As the Indian Law stands today a citizen of this country cannot even own a stick without inviting a penalty of 7 years in prison. We live in a country where we have still not cast off the yoke of antiquated laws made by our colonial masters to keep us oppressed and at the mercy of the government, notwithstanding the lofty vision of the first page of our constitution.

Harping on the few who unfortunately misuse firearms unfairly ignores those millions of us spread all over the world who own and use them responsibly. Dreaming romantically about a world where everything has been made perfectly safe “for the children” is just that, dreaming. I’ve tried visualising world peace until I’m about ready to have an out of body experience, but as soon as I open my eyes, they’re bombing civilians in the North East or gunning down innocents in Kashmir. Welcome to the real world.

“I ask, sir, what is the militia? It is the whole people. To disarm the people is the best and most effectual way to enslave them.”– Patrick Henry

- Answer to a question on guns in India by a a a here : http://in.answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20070325065725AAH1eY4

I Told You So

Posted in Conspiracies, Controversies, Cricket | No Comments

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Sorry to say it but I predicted India’s first round exit from the World Cup sometime back. I’ve been on a vacation and not really keeping track of what happened, only got to know that my dire prediction came true on the flight back. Was with some gujarati pals who seem to think that both India and Pakistan were paid off, most of the top players performed worse than some school cricket teams, pathetic.

An extreme reaction to the shocking exits, just like stoning players houses (forgot that you were kissing the ground they walked on just a few days back?!!) but not entirely unexpected. We Indians do seem to be extreme when it comes to cricket. I always felt that we put too much of our national pride in a privately run team of individuals who are more interested in individual performances, endorsements and money they can make from them, than the game itself. While some, like Sachin & Dravid, probably deserve it, most are just flash in the pan performers. And some don’t even deserve to be in it.

Now Zee has announced a new cricket league. Another money making racket or a new way for corporate India to get involved with sport, only time will tell. But if they can even provide a platform to deserving people who don’t make it to the team just because of regional politics (and other petty considerations) within the selection committe, this will be a good initiative in the long run.

Since none of my advice was followed I assume that the powers that be don’t read my blog (or probably any other for that matter). Sad, so sad. As it is our performance in sports worldwide is pathetic, we don’t even matter in the Asian games, leave alone the Olympics! Now I guess the average Indian sports fan will also have to give up on cricket.

What next? Gulli danda? or Kho Kho (kabbaddi)? I guess we will be the best till some small country with a population of 20,000 people beats us at them too.

Shoaib slapped Woolmer?

Posted in Conspiracies, Controversies, India, Soaps | (1) Comment

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Don’t think so mate. Shoaib might be cool and everything but I don’t think any coach would allow behaviour like this. But then again, it is supposed to have happened the day before Shoib tested positive for steroids!!

The plot thickens.

What if this whole shenanigan was to dump the blame on Ole Wooly and try and get back out of his two year ban. Wooly of course would have to be in on it, I’m not saying he is, just that it would make for a juicy controversy, wouldn’t it?
I wouldn’t put it past any SE Asian team to er…. provide incentives to anyone willing to save their star player.

But who knows, maybe this is just a new kind of ‘Bodyline’ attack by the aussies - send out your coaches all over the world, get them to crap out some very good teams.

For example the Indian Cricket Team. Its got so bad performance wise the BCCI is thinking of making players pay incentive based - great idea that. You don’t score or get wickets you get less money!!

I have another suggestion - if your quarterly pay gets less than X amount - out of the team. The next most deserving person in line gets to try his hand for the next quarter.

Of course, ‘most deserving’ is sometimes not the best player.

But discussing that would add a whole new section to this blog!!

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