On Thu, Jun 1, 2023 at 11:44 AM Tim via users
<users@lists.fedoraproject.org> wrote:
>
> On Thu, 2023-06-01 at 11:15 +0930, Tim via users wrote:
> > Trying to find decent and affordable hosting in my country is an
> > exercise in frustration.  Trying to find one that's actually in my
> > country is difficult
>
> Realising, after the fact, I hadn't mentioned I'm in Australia, during
> this thread...
>
> There's a couple of aspects to wanting local hosting service, apart
> from the obvious of wanting to deal with locals and no overseas call
> centres.  Google will consider my site is Australian if I have an
> Australian IP address, or an Australian top-level domain name.  And can
> return my site as an answer for queries that want local answers,
> instead of discarding it as overseas.

I checked with Ionos support. They said they have a presence in
Australia. I pointed out Australia was not listed in the location
drop-down to select a datacenter. There's probably an internal process
to select Australia for your datacenter.

> I don't have a .au TLD.  You can get personal id.au domain names
> without too many hurdles to jump through, but I don't want one of them
> (a website in my own name).  All the other .au (com.au, net.au, org.au)
> domain names required an Australian Business Number, or other similar
> business registration, I don't have one of them, nor want to get one.
> So having an Australian IP address is the only way to make Google thing
> my .com address is Australian.
>
> Most people around here don't understand the purpose of these various
> top-level subdomains and think that most sites are either simply
> .com.au or .com, so bucking that trend works against you.
>
> While it's a good thing that our name registration system knuckled down
> and insisted that .com.au was only used for commercial sites, likewise
> with .net.au for business, there's asn.au & .org.au for non-profit
> associations and charitable organisations, etc.  Using them for their
> intended purposes.  It's a shame that they didn't have the foresight to
> have a general-purpose top domain, having .net.au simply for something
> that's on the net would have been a good idea.
>
> Only recently (end of last year) they seem to be opening up .au by
> itself for uncategorised purposes, but registrars are price gouging it.

OpenSRS charges $12.50 USD for the various *.au names. I don't know
about the vanity domain names based on ccTLDs, however.

It may be worthwhile to get an OpenSRS reseller account. I have one
because I got tired of companies trying to gouge me in the US. Now I
handle my own registrations for a fraction of the cost.

Jeff
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