WordPress Now Has a 100-Year Domain Registration Option (siliconrepublic.com) 69
Hosting platform WordPress has announced a new century-long domain registration plan for users who want to ensure a lifelong digital legacy. From a report: Its new 100-year plan is designed to give users "the ultimate security and longevity for their digital presence" at a cost of $38,000 -- working out at $380 per year of the plan. While average domain registrations range from one year to a maximum of 10 years, WordPress's new plan allows users to secure their domain for 100 years.
The plan comes with other features as well, such as multiple backups of content across geographically distributed data centres, unmetered bandwidth and "personalised" 24/7 support. The company also claims the plan comes with "enhanced ownership protocols" and "top-tier" managed hosting. In a statement, the company said the offering could be used by families who wish to preserve their digital assets such as stories, photos, sounds and videos or by founders who want to protect and document their company's history.
The plan comes with other features as well, such as multiple backups of content across geographically distributed data centres, unmetered bandwidth and "personalised" 24/7 support. The company also claims the plan comes with "enhanced ownership protocols" and "top-tier" managed hosting. In a statement, the company said the offering could be used by families who wish to preserve their digital assets such as stories, photos, sounds and videos or by founders who want to protect and document their company's history.
Never a good sign (Score:5, Insightful)
Offerings like this often precede obvious signs of monetary issues.
You can't predict your companies future enough for a 100 year commitment.
Re: Never a good sign (Score:3, Informative)
I was just thinking what makes them think they'll be around for 100 years let alone 10 more with the way stuff like this comes and goes.
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$38,000 for wordpress at $380 a year is usury anyway when you can host it for free or almost. Not saying you should use wordpress although but hey!
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And even if they are, will they look anything like their current offering?
In the UK for example, Ceefax launched in 1974 as a way to get text-based pages of information on your TV screen, people started switching from it to the internet in the late 1990s, and it was discontinued as a service in 2012.
Do people really think that the current state of technology is how it is going to be until the end of time, and there will be no new inventions?
insurance company - hopefully (Score:2)
hopefully the money is in a escrow and earns interest etc wordpress the company should not be running this...
wordpress still cant get IPv6 running (although they did add IPv6 to their DNS recently...)
regards
John Jones
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Yeah, that's why crypto currencies and NFTs never took off.
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financial presentism (Score:1)
Or $0 per employee, like so many ephemeral tech companies.
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the rules for domain may change long befor that ti (Score:4, Insightful)
the rules for domain may change long before that time.
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At that price, most of the "value" of the deal (if there is any true value) is in providing media hosting and a software environment for it to run in. If the offer is fair (an open question) then coping with DNS etc changes in a way that maintains the function of the website's code. Certainly, I'd look for that in the contract if I considered it.
Good God, Why? (Score:4, Insightful)
You think WordPress will be popular in 10 years?
If you die, do you expect your site to remain "alive" for the next 99 years? Without being completely rooted thanks to all those crappy WordPress plugins you installed?
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You think WordPress will be popular in 10 years?
First, you are conflating wordpress.com the hosting business, and WordPress, the open source CMS. (To be fair, Automattic wants you to conflate them, but still.)
Secondly, who knows? The WordPress CMS has been around for 20.
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First, you are conflating wordpress.com the hosting business, and WordPress, the open source CMS. (To be fair, Automattic wants you to conflate them, but still.)
Huh...they got me. But then again, I haven't dealt with WordPress for nearly 15 years.
I recognized just how bad it was and moved on.
Secondly, who knows? The WordPress CMS has been around for 20.
...apparently a lot of people haven't moved on...
Re:Good God, Why? (Score:4)
Secondly, who knows? The WordPress CMS has been around for 20.
Kongo Gumi has been operating in Japan for over 1,400 years. A restaurant in Austria for over 1,200, a winery in Germany nearly as long, a pub in Ireland over 1,100.
This is being marketed to individuals, it's being marketed to corporations, and there are many that are already over a hundred years old.
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You can say companies will always want to have a marketing presence.. but "online" could change dramatically in 100 years. Heck, the Internet and how websites are built changed dramatically in the last 30 years. Maybe that pace of change will slow down, but... I wouldn't b
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None of these are in the tech industry.
But they are the market for 100 year domain registrations. Very, very few customers of tech companies are tech companies. That's the point.
Restaurants are a timeless business (as an industry, not individual restaurants since they are incredibly hard to run), because people will always want to eat.
Since I was talking about an individual restaurant, what's your point? The overwhelming majority fail within two years, but corporations can, and do, and have, last much, must longer.
I wouldn't bet on Wordpress being used in another 100 years myself.
Neither would I. I'm inclined to believe this isn't a very good investment, even if it is backed by some sort of escrow, but the point remains: This isn't a service aimed at individuals, it'
Re: Good God, Why? (Score:3)
Re:Good God, Why? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why buy a 100-year WordPress domain? You think WordPress will be popular in 10 years?
They market it as 1) "a gitf for a newborn" and 2) an archival service for your lifelong work. For 1) it is certainly not very clever (wordpress.com will eventually lose attractiveness like facebook did), but 2) makes sense if you are a narcissist in his 60+ and worried about the world forgetting your work / published opinions / essays. It does not matter if the wordpress CMS disappears, they just have to preserve HTML and keep it available. Like archive.org preserving Geocities or the National Library of France preserving Skyblog (once a popular blog platform for teenagers before Facebook took their customer base).
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lose attractiveness like facebook did
For the most part, I agree with your points. And don't take this as me licking Zuckerberg's boot, (or gargling his balls, or however you want to put it) but really? This [statista.com] doesn't agree with your worldview, no matter how much you hate Facebook, Meta, Zuckerberg, whatever.
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I did not mean facebook was on the way out , but that it "lost attractivity". An attractive place (the fashionable place where you and all your friends spend their day) is what could justify to purchase the domain. Now Facebook is understood as a place for parents, maybe to find the time table of the restaurant (I don't have data though). My point is that if facebook were to sell usernames, that would not be a cool gift for a newborn, and I forecast the same will happen to wordpress.com.
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This sounds like a great deal for the next Heaven's Gate cult.
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As named "executor" to my parent's will, last night I was pricing up a job l
100 year price lock? (Score:2)
who is going pay the differences when that price becomes and big loss for some one.
GTFO ... (Score:5, Insightful)
$38,000?
Just how stupid do you have to be to pay $380 for ONE year's domain registration, much less 100x that amount for a century's worth - from a company that might very well be out of business decades before your registration expires?
In fact, given how idiotic this offer appears, it could easily be mismanaged into the ground by the middle of next week ...
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> Just how stupid do you have to be to pay $380 for ONE year's domain registration, much less 100x that amount for a century's worth
How much is forgetting to renew a domain worth? Credit cards have expiration dates and it's a lot to manage. Don't the domain management agencies charge more?
For many businesses $38K ain't much. I don't know if they need Wordpress but too many big sites do.
It's like the FBI trying to seal Seth Rich's totally-nothing-to-see-there laptop for 66 years - everybody will be dea
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I was gonna say could've been worth it if they managed all the SSL certificates for you as well,
The inclusion of "top tier managed hosting" rather implies they might do just that.
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If a business is worried about losing their domain because they forget, how about just set up auto-renew? And if your registrar is worth anything, they'll send you a bill if your credit card has expired.
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From TFA:
"The plan comes with other features as well, such as multiple backups of content across geographically distributed data centres, unmetered bandwidth and “personalised” 24/7 support. The company also claims the plan comes with “enhanced ownership protocols” and “top-tier” managed hosting."
If that's accurate, and it's actually backed by some kind of escrow, it isn't necessarily all that bad.
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If you have to use Wordpress, then it's not top-tier anything.
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Don't alot of big orgs pay alot more then that to register / renew their domains?
Might be wrong / outdated, but I recall reading somewhere that alot of the big guys use markmonitor.com to register / renew domains and they charge alot more then 380 per year for a domain renewal(maybe with some other related services - but not hosting or anything related to that).
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Well. Who knows. It may look pretty savvy in 10 years when it costs 400 or more per year to register and host a domain.
I am thinking that the bean counters crunched the numbers and figured that the interest alone from that money would pay for the ongoing costs and inflation.
So! (Score:2)
What are the odds... (Score:5, Insightful)
...that the contract you sign today with WordPress will still have any meaning in 50 years? In 100? I'm thinking that the odds are very low indeed. So, the cost of the contract won't "work out to be $380 per year". It'll work out to something much larger.
At some point, WordPress will stop existing (for whatever reason). I also wonder if the service they are contracting to provide will even exist in 100 years. Will we still have domain registries in 100 years? Will people still be storing their personal data in "the cloud"? If they are, will they be paying for it, or will it simply be a free public utility like the roads we drive on? (Less optimistically, will computers or humans still be around?)
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My guess is that some new thing that nobody has even thought of yet will make the current system completely obsolete.
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IANAL but I would guess that any contract that you sign is nullified upon your death. So 100 years really means "your lifetime"
Sort of like how other marketers sell "lifetime warranties" or "unlimited bandwidth". They don't mean what you think they mean.
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380/yr for domain service?? What are these laughable enhancements? WordPress was never meant to get to the size it is (or thinks it is). It's time for it to dissolve and Joomla to finally take it's place! :)
They had to account for the possibility of future monetary inflation effects...by inflating their prices accordingly.
What's next (Score:1)
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sonny bono (Score:2)
Sonny Bono is going to register one from the grave and extend copyrights even more.
LOL (Score:3)
I've purchased 5 years at a time but this? No way. $380 a year?? I purchase at $10 to $15 per year now. Why would anyone do this?
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I would be amazed if even AWS existed as we know it 100 years from now. Sure, they look like an unstoppable juggernaut now, but so did Sears back in the 1960s, and look what happened to them.
Great! (Score:2)
100 years ago (Score:1)
Re: 100 years ago (Score:2)
... apart from the self-driving cars and AI.
We have them the same way as we have teleportation (gestures to elevator) and antigravity (gestures to Cessna 172).
Re: 100 years ago (Score:2)
Re: 100 years ago (Score:2)
Outrageous? (Score:2)
Verisign is contractually allowed to raise .com prices 7% for each of the last four years of a six year period. That comes out to an average 4.7% per year. At that rate of increase, a .com domain will cost almost $1000 per year in a hundred years. Obviously you need to take into account that people will earn more, so you have to discount the price increases accordingly, but renting online space, be it domains or cloud services, is a racket regardless.
Many of you don't see the potential here (Score:2)
Because you don't have a terminal illness or are trying to do legacy planning for someone. The question of how to preserve your IP and make things available for your heirs after you're gone in this day and age is a perplexing issue.
Archivists are worried sick about how to preserve digital files. An old picture can be displayed as it. An old digital file needs software, codecs, physical hardware, etc. Now if you're trying to preserve a decades long blog, throw in yearly domain registration and DNS / web
This is a scam (Score:2)
There's every possibility that Wordpress won't be around on 100 years. Does this plan have contingency plans for that? Do they take your money into escrow and invest it so that they can service your account in 100 years? Probably not.
They take your money NOW, when it is worth the most, due to inflation, and then promise service.
What about if we come up with some other system besides domain name registration? Similarly SOL.
If it does become popular, what are the chances that later on in the contract all t
Not a great deal (Score:2)
Someone figured out it's about $30 a month. I pay a good bit less than that per month for both domain registration and hosting.
Why? (Score:1)