Success Stories

.SUCKS in Practice, Success Stories

Trust requires some risk

A primary value of the dotSucks platform is that the use of the word cuts through the incredible amount of noise we hear everyday. That’s not just our view, but the view of the people who are using a dotSucks domain to express a point-of-view and rally others to it. This is the fuel for sites like www.logging.sucks, www.theinternet.sucks and www.aircanada.sucks. Every day, we see more and more evidence that what used to be considered profanity becoming a point-of-view. This is especially true for those trying to reach a younger, more inclusive, more mobile audience. Every day, we are learning the value of taking a little risk. Last Tuesday was just such a day. In reading an article in Canada’s leading news magazine McLean’s, I was introduced to Indiana University Professor of English Michael Adams. Here is what caught my eye: “Profanity is socially useful because it is socially risky.” He added: “We need linguistic boundaries to transgress in order to register objection, pain and social solidarity, and it’s precisely the transgression, not the words, that matters.” It was clear I needed to talk to Professor Adams. He had just published a new book, “In Praise of Profanity,” an outgrowth of his work as a historian of English. He noted, as do we, that “profanity is expressive speech” and a “sign of familiarity.” For anyone seeking to reach that wider audience, it may be that taking a risk might not be taking much of a risk at all. Not only does “trust require some risk” but Professor Adams noted that while once “profanity might have been forbidden and shocking, it may still be shocking, but not forbidden.” Perhaps it might be that casual business dress introduced in the ’90s might have just been a precursor (pun intended) to more casual business language. Professor Adams, who looked first at slang (he called it a “poetic language”) soon after turned his attention to profanity. As if one were the gateway to the other. Profanity began, he said, as a way to defame God, both directly and eventually in more sanitized versions. I had no idea, for example, that one of my favorite exclamation points, “Geez, Louise,” is just a cleaned up version of such defamation. But soon, profanity became less about the deity and more about the ins-and-outs (nod, nod, wink, wink to all my fellow Monty Python fans) bodily functions. I am sure you can think of one or two that qualify. Of keen interest to me is Adams’ take on the origin of “sucks.” Neither defamation nor excrement, Professor Adams assures it originated in the 19th Century, either as “sucks wind” (debilitating, at the least) or “sucks eggs” (a task of some difficulty). Ultimately, for those of us who seek to use language to teach, advocate, seduce or motivate, profanity may not be vulgar at all. Especially as the demographic of those we seek to reach changes. As Professor Adams wrote in his book: “Were I younger, I might not think to examine the problems of vulgarity at all.” That’s because, I think, profanity is no longer a problem, it may, in fact, be part of the solution.

Case Studies, Success Stories

Neustar is our best business partner for 2015

Vox Populi Registry, the company bringing dotSucks domain names to the Internet, has announced that its technology platform services provider, Neustar, Inc. (NYSE:NSR), has been given the Registry’s first-ever “Best Business Partner” award. Created last December, Vox Populi Registry, located in the Cayman Islands, initially partnered with Australia-based ARI Services as its back-end technology provider. Neustar, based in Sterling, Virgina acquired that company last Summer. The award – “Recognizing exemplary technical support in year one of the domain name registry” — was presented to Adrian Kinderis, former CEO of Bombora Technologies (ARI’s parent company) and now VP, Corporate Development at Neustar, at the domain name conference, NamesCon, this week in Las Vegas. “Our success in this first year of operation is a product of our business plan, marketing, sales channel and rock-solid technical support for our names,” said John Berard, Vox Populi Registry’s CEO. “Neustar is making sure of it. They’ve earned this award.” The award acknowledges that Neustar was essential to Vox Populi Registry’s success as its “impeccable” technical platform allowed Vox Populi Registry to devote itself full-time to market awareness and sales. Vox Populi Registy is just one of hundreds of companies bringing new Internet domain names online. The program, managed by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers or ICANN, was designed to help people better portray their digital identity. According to Berard, dotSucks names offer an unprecedented opportunity for people with a point-of-view not just to speak, but be more likely heard. “As a provocative service, with deep roots in free speech and fast-growing branches of comment and criticism, it was imperative to rally a set of business partners who could support us in our mission,” Berard said. “First as ARI and then as Neustar, they did the job.”

.SUCKS in Practice, Success Stories

Keeping dotSucks Current

Last month, Vox Populi Registry implemented a new policy to keep the dotSucks platform current. Going forward, it is our plan to regularly update both our Market Premium and Reserved domain lists. At this point, monthly. As noted on our website, www.registry.sucks, Market Premium names are those that have been curated from a broad set of sources indicating a persistent and high interest in their use. Reserved names affected by this change are those that are held by the Registry, initially, for its own purposes and use, as in marketing. I don’t know of other domain name registries that are taking the time to curate their lists, but here is why we’re doing it. It is clear to us that the new gTLD program has yielded some fresh insights into the way we want to live online. It is a powerful human urge to let the world know who we are and what we think. We want to be seen as ourselves. That’s why identity has been a key driver of the new Internet landscape. Whether .doctor, .lawyer or .indianchief, the rapid adoption of new gTLDs has been fueled by their ability to effectively represent who we are in all the worlds we inhabit. We want to influence our world. That’s why comment and criticism have accelerated Internet growth. Whether a good review or bad, a question or an answer, a quick take or thoughtful suggestion, the urge to be heard – combined with identity, to be recognized — is undeniable. The new gTLDs help there, too. When the public Internet was made real 20 years ago, it gave us a start. A company’s email address was a “welcome mat” for conversation. The rise of eCommerce then led companies courting consumers actually to begin listening, but selectively and on their own channels. Now, just as the new gTLD program created the opportunity for all to be ourselves on line, it offers greater assurance that we will be heard – on our terms. An essential element of our identity and our passions is context. At work we can be a boss or an employee. At home we can be a husband or a wife. In polite society, we can be a Republican or a Democrat. We can love the new restaurant or hate it. The movie may be fabulous or perhaps it just sucks. The new gTLD program has given each of us a chance to be and say each of those things. This was the rule of human behavior that led us to create Vox Populi Registry a year ago and the dotSucks domain names. It strikes us that, as events occur and passions wax and wane, a list of names, either Market Premium or Reserved, ought to change with the times. Moving forward monthly, once a name is removed from the Reserved list, it will become instantly available for registration. In the same way, a domain removed from the Market Premium list will become instantly available for registration at the standard price. Our Registrar partners will be able to help Registrants navigate the changes as they occur. Vox Populi Registry has worked hard to be true to our mission: “dotSucks is designed to help consumers find their voices and allow companies to find the value in criticism.” By being sensitive to the issues and events of the day, we intend to stay in tune with what people are talking about and keeping dotSucks current.

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