• redjard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                2 days ago

                In the underlying system there is no difference. A renewal is just a transfer/registration leaving the data unchanged.
                All cost the same and add 1 year of lifetime to the domain.
                Any other pricing is invented by that specific registrar and doesn’t reflect actual costs.

          • redjard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            2 days ago

            What a ripoff, .com has always been about 10$. The renewal being somehow more expensive than a new registration, while in actuality there is no difference in the process, really makes it obvious they charge what they think people will fall for.

            $7.85 per year in 2012. $8.39 in 2021, $8.97 in 2022, and $9.59 in 2023, $10.26 in 2024, increases always in september.

            Transfers, registrations, and renewals all cost the same and all charge the domain by 1 year. You can charge at any time for I think up to 10 years. Any registrar not passing that system on is being deceptive.

            They aren’t even roping in people with prices below cost, they charge you a reasonable fee for the first year and then somehow bank on people not switching. Maybe they make the process really painful?

            Either way why would anyone use them?

              • redjard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                2 days ago

                You could use njal.la, who charge a flat 15$ without deceptive schemes and actually protect your privacy properly too.
                To be fair namecheap legally can’t do what njalla does since namecheap is a primary registrar and njalla secondary.

                In terms of activism I’d think both getting the cheapest option and donating 8$ a year to the eff or a similar group directly, or taking a njalla domain and donating 3$, would be cheaper than namecheap and also more effective at defending internet freedom.