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Domain Name Industry Conference in Seattle, May 25
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It is rather pretentious to call today's collection of registries and registrars, and any third tier providers, an "industry".
Rather, because it is essentially a business sector that is closed to those who do not wish to submit their product offerings, prices, and customer lists to ICANN and obtain ICANN's blessing, it is far more accurate to call the whole thing, ICANN and the businesses, a combination in restraint of trade.
This system because it has a built in registry price floor and because it denies entry to many who wish to participate in this marketplace is costing consumers hundreds of millions of dollars per year in excessive fees and an additional amount in hidden costs (due to things like the UDRP kangaroo court system and an ethical structure that makes used car salesman look squeeky clean by comparision.)
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Yes. I quite happily ran for several year using one of the competing root systems. My internet name space had a much richer set of TLDs than those offered through ICANN. And for those TLDs offered by ICANN, the competing root systems offered up the same delegation information as the ICANN/NTIA root servers and led me to exactly the same TLD servers.
And as you point out all it took was a small change to one file on those computers that I use as DNS resolvers.
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