Comment by SR2Z

Comment by SR2Z 2 days ago

10 replies

I mean, sure, but I and probably 99% of other folks have a credit card set up to autorenew. This is a security problem, but not a very serious one.

stubish 2 days ago

Credit cards have expiry dates, or at least they do over here. I expect my partners domain to expire 10 years after my death, as I can only pay 10 years in advance. To many people, there are more important things to worry about (and often second thoughts after the fact).

  • koolba 2 days ago

    Why hasn’t anyone made a TLD with infinite expiration?

    The price should just be the present value of the annual fee cash flows.

    • easygenes a day ago

      Hate to say, but might actually be a legitimate use case for blockchain here. Identity provider which is responsible for being a source of truth on aliveness tied to a smart contract for paying annual registrar fees.

      Though the traditional way would just be finding a registrar which can direct debit (e.g. CSC Global or MarkMonitor) or setting up a trust account for someone to manage it for you. Or just power of attorney plus escrowed account.

      • palata 4 hours ago

        Apart from cryptocurrencies, I don't think that there are any legitimate use-cases for blockchain.

        Then the question is whether we want cryptocurrencies or not (I don't).

    • pyrolistical 2 days ago

      I don’t get it, example?

      • neongreen 2 days ago

        A promise of money in the future is worth less than getting this money now. Present value (PV) here would be - how much you would pay now to get $X after T time.

        Turns out that sum of PV($X in 1 year) + PV($X in 2 years) + … converges even though the series is infinite. Look up “perpetual bonds”.

        The value of $10 paid annually forever is probably $200-500 depending on [things].

        Source: I work in a bank but I’m also shit at finance so take this with a large grain of salt.