Suzanne,

On Apr 7, 2016, at 2:49 PM, Suzanne Woolf <suzworldw...@gmail.com> wrote:
> It is a matter of scope, to say nothing of opinion, that “all names are 
> subject to socio-economic pressures.”
> [...]
> Given that discussion of “special use names” is even more likely than most to 
> suffer from assumptions about context, a more precise formulation of this 
> claim would probably be helpful.

The way I see it, "Internet names" (that is, domain names whether they are used 
in the DNS or not) are typically used to identify hosts, end points, or 
services on the Internet. People tend to get wound up with their identity and 
how that identity is made available on the Internet (or overlays on top of the 
Internet). That being wound up often result in socio-economic pressures, e.g., 
being bought/sold, triggering lawsuits over ownership/existence, etc.  Do some 
of those identities not get tied up in those socio-economic pressures?  Sure, 
the vast majority.  However, I'm not sure I can see how all identities are not 
subject to socio-economic pressures.

Regards,
-drc
(speaking only for myself)

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