On Mon, 2024-01-15 at 15:58 -0800, Cabel Sasser wrote:
> 
> Can anyone help me understand “the science”? And how these domains are chosen 
> for such a heavy punishment?

What you're facing is essentially an economic problem. Everyone knows
dot-com, and to a lesser extent dot-net and dot-org. But everything
else is junk: if you're the fifth guy to try to buy example.com, you're
probably not who people are looking for when they type www.example.com
into their web browsers. The other TLDs are also much harder for people
to remember if they see it on a commercial. As a result, dot-info, dot-
biz, and everything after have always been considered knock-offs.

When the wave of new gTLDs hit, the value of each successive one became
diluted even further. By the time you get to dot-date, you're at what
should be, like, somebody's 40th choice for a domain name. How to you
sell that? At a huge fucking discount, if you want anyone to buy it!

That's one half of your economic problem.

Now imagine you're trying to block spammers by domain name, and there's
one particular set of domain names that they can get at a 90% discount
because nobody wants them otherwise. Regardless of how many legitimate
companies use those domains, the signal to noise ratio is going to be
crap.

So, the other half of your economic problem is: how much money does it
cost me (as a recipient) to block dot-date, versus how much does it
cost me to not block it? We have customers who complain about spam and
customers who complain about blocked messages. It's a pretty easy
calculation for a recipient to make, and the result for me at least is
that it's less work (i.e. less expensive) to just block every new gTLD
and whitelist the few legitimate senders brave enough to live there.

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