Ethereum [ETH] co-founder Vitalik Buterin and Ethereum Name Service [ENS] developers are at loggerheads due to the newly proposed pricing arrangements. On 9 September, Vitalik published a post via his ENS website, asking if the domains should follow a recurring pricing structure.
According to him, ENS domains are very cheap as the cost to maintain a five-word one was at most $5. While highlighting the property rights, and efficient market challenges, Vitalik mentioned that an increased price structure could offer a solution. Additionally, he mentioned the possibility of using the revenue generated to fund the ENS Decentralized Autonomous Organization (ENSDAO).
In response to the ETH founder’s proposal, ENS developers seemed to be on an opposite site of the page. First, it was Nick Johnson pointing out some flaws in the proposal.
The developer noted that Vitalik’s piece was thoughtful. However, he argued that there were some design constraints, as well as the externalities of the naming system. Also, the idea behind paying more for a name may be untempting. Johnson said,
“The people hurt by a change in ownership may not be the same people who get paid for the name. The value of a name to a third-party does not necessarily correspond to the profit gained by its current owner owning it.”
Interestingly, Johnson was not the only one opposed to Vitalik’s idea. Another ENS developer, Jeff Lau also shared Johnson’s opinion. She cited that Vitalik focused too much on funding rather than user accessibility in his proposal.
<p lang=«en» dir=«ltr» xml:lang=«en»>On V's idea of using bids as an input, it *feels* quite complicated to me. It would require a cryptopunks-style onchain bid/ask system. And it would probably mean 10s of Read more on ambcrypto.com