It's plain old business.

I've bought cars to sell for profit.  I've sold software that I made.  I wanted to buy a house in Phoenix when I got here however the investors were buying them all and now houses sell for twice as much.... That angered me.

I own a bunch of domains and hope to develop them - value added and either make money off them directly or sell them. 

If you want a domain you better buy it now. 

Oh and anyone can go to college - just look at me.  I'm a high school drop out and went to college on the GI bill and completed a BS from the UofA.

If you really want to go there are ways.

I don't think I'm a scumbag because I speculate on domains.  I plan on buying an acre or 2 out east of AJ or North of Scottsdale - way out so in 10 or 15 years I can build on it. Does that make me a scumbag?

Keith


Darrin Chandler <dwchandler@stilyagin.com> wrote:
On Sat, Oct 14, 2006 at 12:00:59PM -0700, Dazed_75 wrote:
> I think that cat has been out of the bag for quite some time. My feeling is
> that this is ONE of many things that lead to the internet pollution and
> dilution we have seen increasing over the years.
>
> I DO NOT mean this as a flame BTW, but rather a commentary on the rampant
> commercialism in today's society that supports people making money from
> things which give no inherent value. I apologize if I have offended anyone,
> but it is a hot button I find difficult to ignore.
>
> Rather akin to the patent camping going on today which the US government
> should have clamped down on long ago by actually enforcing their own rules
> if only they had the resources to do so. Of course the lawyers created
> these cash cows and it is probably too late to fix it.
>
> I'll shut my yap now and again, I apologize.

No apology needed. Perhaps the biggest reason I didn't do it when I
first thought of it was that there was some nagging feeling that I
didn't like the ethics. I went around about whether it was right or
wrong and couldn't put my finger on anything specific that wasn't
ethical, but that nagging feeling was still there.

This really isn't any different from land speculation. People buy
property and sit on it (or lease it in the meantime) hoping that
somebody will want to develop it later. Then they hope to make a
killing. If you want to buy land somewhere and find out it's more
expensive than the cheapest land available anywhere, nobody would be
surprised, or angry. So it is with domain names, apparently.

So where does this nagging feeling come from that I'd be a scumbag if I
bought up tons of domains for profit? Is it just some idealistic longing
for a better world in which the deserving go to college? Or is there
some hidden moral issue I haven't pinned down yet?

--
Darrin Chandler | Phoenix BSD Users Group
dwchandler@stilyagin.com | http://bsd.phoenix.az.us/
http://www.stilyagin.com/ |
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