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  #1  
舊 2010-07-06, 12:03 AM
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預設 Tuvalu Unhappy with .TV domain name return

Tuvalu Unhappy with .TV domain name return

Posted at 06:47 on 05 July, 2010 UTC

引用:
Tuvalu’s Finance Minister says the country isn’t getting enough money from the US company which bought the dot-tv internet domain off it.

The government sold its internet domain code in the late 1990s when the internet was in its infancy.

The domain is operated by DotTv, a VeriSign company, which pays Tuvalu about two million US dollars a year for use of the name.

Lotoala Metia feels VeriSign should be paying more for use of the name but says the company is playing hardball.

引用:
“We are negotiating but we are tied because of the agreement that was signed before us. We cannot negotiate for an increase until 2016. Counter offers have been made but they are not acceptable to the government of the day. So we have to stick to our guns now. They’re giving us peanuts.”
Tuvalu’s Finance Minister, Lotoala Metia
http://www.local-languages.com/artic...in-name-return
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  #2  
舊 2010-07-06, 12:37 AM
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註冊日期: 2002-05-28
文章: 23,011
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簽約就是簽約,自然不能中途看了人家賺更多的錢而反悔。人家當初也是出了一大筆錢,外加多年來的廣告宣傳,這也都是目前註冊商要負擔的風險。你當初拿了人家一大筆錢並且簽了約,人家可沒少付,現在等人家生意做大了就想去多拿一些,人家當然不肯。
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  #3  
舊 2010-07-06, 12:42 AM
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引用:
作者: 哈啦 查看文章
簽約就是簽約,自然不能中途看了人家賺更多的錢而反悔。人家當初也是出了一大筆錢,外加多年來的廣告宣傳,這也都是目前註冊商要負擔的風險。你當初拿了人家一大筆錢並且簽了約,人家可沒少付,現在等人家生意做大了就想去多拿一些,人家當然不肯。

每年 200 萬美元 也是筆不小的數目 -
而 2016 年 轉眼就到了...
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  #4  
舊 2010-07-06, 12:52 AM
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引用:
作者: best-url 查看文章
每年 200 萬美元 也是筆不小的數目 -
而 2016 年 轉眼就到了...
但因為最近二年.tv爆紅,大概看人家賺得多而自己還是只能拿固定薪水而不爽吧。
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  #5  
舊 2010-07-07, 09:25 PM
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預設 Tuvalu faces de-valued domain name

Tuvalu faces de-valued domain name

July 7, 2010 20:55:26

引用:
The Pacific island nation of Tuvalu is pushing for more money for its real estate - but not it's bricks and mortar real estate, rather its sought-after Internet tag.

Tuvalu owns the domain name 'dot-tv', which American company Verisign manages and sells as website addresses. But with new changes coming to the Internet soon, Tuvalu may be left stranded with little bargaining power.
http://www.local-languages.com/artic...ed-domain-name


似乎 跟 Verisign 的合約快要到期了...
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  #6  
舊 2010-07-07, 10:30 PM
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註冊日期: 2003-09-23
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預設

不是快沉了

需要更多資金來買向別的國家買土地.... @@
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  #7  
舊 2010-07-09, 04:34 PM
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預設 .TV domain name causing problems

.TV 投資者 請注意這則訊息 -


Tuvalu internet domain name causing problems

Dan Parker FRI, 09 JUL 2010 6:30P.M.

引用:
The most famous deal in Tuvalu's trade history has been labelled as "exploitation" by the Government that has now inherited it.

The deal was for the sale of the island's internet domain which ends with the address .tv – TV standing for Tuvalu.

Tuvalu's made millions from its TV star status but now an error message has appeared.

With a quarter of the working population unemployed a large portion of Tuvalu's men work and live overseas to send money home.

The island's economy relies on it, while its people rely on the internet to keep those families connected.

The internet has also provided a stream of income for the impoverished nation.

In 2000 the Government leased its domain name, .tv, to American company Verisign, which sells the addresses to television channels, critics and bloggers around the world – including in New Zealand.

“Given that so many domain names have been taken with .com or .co.nz, I think a lot more websites will be going in this direction and having something like .tv – particularly if it's relevant to what you are writing about is very advantageous,” says Phil Wakefield of www.screenscribe.tv.

The Government of Tuvalu received US$20 million as well as annual royalties of $4 million.

It was a famous piece of opportunism that featured in headlines around the world. But finance minister Loto Metia says the royalties have recently halved and the previous government didn't negotiate the best deal it could have.

Lotoala metia:
"We do feel that we have been exploited and should receive more but they are say, ‘no, this is what you should receive’, and it’s very difficult to know what's going on in the business,” he says.

Verisign refused to comment about any financial matters but its current arrangement runs until 2016.

Mr Metia says Verisign wants a five year extension but that has been rejected and the rights for the island's famous initials will again be made available to the highest bidder.
http://www.local-languages.com/artic...using-problems
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  #8  
舊 2010-07-18, 08:53 AM
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預設 Internet domain riches fail to arrive in Tuvalu

Internet domain riches fail to arrive in Tuvalu

By Roger Maynard Sunday, 18 July 2010


Global warming is raising sea levels and eroding the coast of the narrow strip of Tuvalu. Seawater floods holes dug by the Americans in the Second World War

引用:
The Pacific island hoped the sale of its '.tv' suffix to websites would boost its troubled economy. Now it says it is being deprived of millions in royalties

The tiny South Pacific island state of Tuvalu, where the average income is little more than £12 a week, has taken on one of the giants of cyberspace by demanding a greater share of the lucrative earnings generated by its unique domain name suffix.



When Tuvalu was awarded ".tv" by the International Organisation for Standardisation in 1999, global internet providers queued up to do business with the former British protectorate, which used to be part of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands. At least five internet companies flew to the remote capital of Funafuti to tender for the right to lease the initials TV so that it could be used by television and media organisations around the world. Eventually a deal was struck with a Californian company which offered an advance payment of $50m (£33m) – more than half Tuvalu's annual GDP at the time – with many more millions to follow.

Hopes for the value of the suffix proved well founded. Television networks such as Britain's GM.tv, football clubs such as Liverpoolfc.tv and celebrity websites such as Hollywood.tv paid big money for a web address with the coveted suffix. But this rich and glossy corner of cyberspace, where media companies continue to pay many thousands of pounds to put .tv after their names, has little in common with the harsh reality of Tuvalu itself. Beset by environmental contamination, high unemployment and rising ocean levels, Tuvalu and its 11,000 people face an uncertain future.

Covering just 10 square miles, the main island, which has no streams or rivers, produces little in the way of crops and relies on processed food from Western nations to feed its people. For some years, Tuvalu and other Pacific islands have been used as a dumping ground for cheap and fatty cuts of meat by larger countries such as New Zealand. The poor diet has created major health problems, with heart disease and diabetes killing people in their thirties and forties.

More than 3,000 miles from its nearest First World neighbours, New Zealand and Australia, Tuvalu is also one of the world's most isolated societies. Western packaging and machinery are difficult to dispose of, leaving much of the main island with a major rubbish problem. Old cars litter the beach and massive holes excavated by the Americans to build a runway during the Second World War add to its mounting environmental woes.

Tuvalu also finds itself on the frontline of climate change. In recent years many coastal homes have been swamped by rising ocean levels which have eroded the coast and added to the salination of the soil which in turn threatens the community's subsistence farming. Given that the highest point on Tuvalu is only 16 feet above sea level, the risk of the archipelago of nine islands being swamped is high.

The Prime Minister, Apisai Ielemia, who refused to sign a proposal at last year's Copenhagen talks that supported a two-degree cap on global temperature rises, believes such a limit would spell disaster for his nation. According to the government's environmental director, Mataio Tekinene, the facts speak for themselves, with the increased frequency of hurricanes and storm surges clearly illustrating the long-term impact of climate change.

Beside this bleak environmental scenario, Tuvalu faces profound economic problems. A trust fund set up in l987 with contributions from several Western nations, including its old colonial master, Britain, has been hit by the global financial crisis over the past two years. The International Monetary Fund recently gave Tuvalu £1.6m, but the government has annual outgoings of more than £18m and a 2010 budget deficit of £5.7m.

The Minister of Finance, Lotoala Metia, says they can probably survive for a couple more years, but after that the money will run out. That is why that internet suffix is so crucial to their survival. However, despite all the early promises of lucrative annual payments for the lease, Tuvalu earns about £1m a year in royalties from the US company Verisign, which markets and sells ".tv" to website owners. That is roughly a 10th of the government's total revenue and, according to Mr Metia, it is not enough. The payment should be nearer £5m a year, given the amount of business the domain suffix is earning in royalties, he said.

According to the thedomains-dot-com blog, Verisign recently auctioned the name business.tv for more than $100,000 and Learn.tv for $40,000. In all, more than 100 names were sold in the auction. "We are not getting what we should be getting. Other companies have offered us very attractive packages," Mr Metia claims.

The problem is that the contract has another six years to run. The Finance Minister says Verisign has offered another £500,000 a year, but only if Tuvalu extends the contact for another five years.

Mr Metia believes that is not enough. "It is an important issue, but we have an agreement which we will have to honour," he says.

While it is easy to sympathise with Tuvalu's position, others within the internet industry do not share Mr Metia's sense that the islanders are being exploited.

Adrian Kinderis, who provides a similar domain service for Australians seeking the ".au" suffix, believes Tuvalu has a pretty good deal. "I don't know how much Verisign are making, but you must take into account how much money they've spent on marketing this and how much it costs to run the registry," he says.

Mr Kinderis, the chief executive of Ausregistry International, adds: "It's easy to look at this as a sort of David and Goliath situation, but I believe Tuvalu should not look a gift horse in the mouth."

Verisign refused to be drawn on Tuvalu's demand for more money. In a statement, the company said: "Verisign is very proud of its long-standing relationship with the government of Tuvalu, but it is not in a position to comment any further around ongoing business or financial discussions with said government in relation to '.tv'."

How long the stand-off between this giant of cyberspace and the South Pacific minnow continues may depend on how the market for domain names develops. With plans for more commercially driven suffixes such as .movie, .film and even .television just around the corner, Tuvalu could soon face tough competition in cyberspace.

"Let's not forget that the advent of these new, generic, top-level domains is not far away," Mr Kinderis says. "You will see the value of '.tv' diminishing, which could mean Tuvalu saying, 'Well, Jeez, we actually did pretty well out of that, when all's said and done.'"

Such an eventuality would bring even greater financial hardship on the island state. Apart from copra, or dried coconut kernel, Tuvalu has few exports. The government makes money from the sale of tuna fishing licences and by selling its postage stamps to philatelists.

There was a time when Tuvalu enjoyed a significant revenue boost from telephone sex lines, which were routed through the country's international access code, 688. But the contract was cancelled in 2000 because of the devoutly Christian population's disapproval of the arrangement.

The ultimate concern is that islanders will have to leave their little corner of the South Pacific if the money runs out.

Mr Metia describes it as a "very, very difficult situation". "The challenge that we're facing at the moment is that unless we get assistance from donors we will not be able to progress any further."

It is not an issue of immediate concern to the glittering world of television and the multimedia websites that spend big money for the privilege of using the ".tv" suffix. But back on Tuvalu, it is of critical importance to those who are no longer masters of their own domain.
http://www.local-languages.com/artic...rive-in-Tuvalu
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