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> I don't see how squatters would benefit more from that than other people registering domains.

Registering a domain is not an issue to anyone.

Some domain name registrars even offer multi-year subscription plans for those who don't want to bother with the 5minute work it takes to extend a subscription, and send out warnings months in advance to renew subscriptions.



Which registrars offer that?


> Which registrars offer that?

I expect all of them, and I'd be very surprised if any domain name registrar didn't offered this feature.

For example, both Namecheap and GoDaddy allow customers to extend domain registrations up to 10 years in one go.


If anyone is curious as to why it is 10 years nearly everywhere, that limit comes from ICANN.

Network Solutions does offer a 100 year plan (and used to offer a 1000 year plan, but I just checked and that one is gone) but the way the implement is by registering for 10 years and then every year for the next 90 years adding a year.

You only really have the domain registered for 10 years, and you are betting the Network Solutions will still be around for 90 more years, and Network Solutions is betting that the price they have to pay for domains in that TLD will not have gone up so much that the total cost of all those extensions is more than what they earned by having your initial large [1] upfront payment invested for 100 years.

My recommendation: register your domain for 10 years. Don't turn on auto-renewal. Add an annual "Check my domain registration" item to your calendar. When that items come up each year either (1) add another year to your domain, or (2) check to see if it is near expiration and add years.

[1] $1600 for 100 years of a random .com.


The 100 year plan is for $999: https://www.networksolutions.com/domain-name-registration/po...

Do you remember how much the 1000 year plan costed?


No, and I can't find anything on it so it is possible that I misremembered. I definitely remember that they had a plan that was longer than the ICANN maximum and another plan that was way longer than that one, but it may have been 20 years and 100 years rather than 100 years and 1000 years.




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