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When Bitcoins stop being generated it won't be a problem: prices can gradually be lower. Namecoins, however, have a more-or-less set price, which is the domain register price. If Namecoins stop being generated, but people of course still want to register domains, what happens?
1From what I gather from the Namecoin FAQ, the registration price will be dropping in the future, but I wonder if they will be low enough not to spend the entire supply eventually. – ThePiachu – 2012-01-04T01:36:06.440
1That's a very good question. I thought I read somewhere that the block reward doesn't drop with Namecoin, but the FAQ says I'm wrong. I wonder if a no-blockreward-drop scheme would be a better fit for Namecoin. – ripper234 – 2012-01-04T11:15:11.253
1In fact, even if there was no drop in block rewards, in practice there is a finite number of domains that we'll be able to register by any given year. I'm not sure this is a great idea... However, this might not be a problem in practice because the actual number of Namecoins / potential number of domain names. – ripper234 – 2012-01-04T11:19:16.440
1I too did read somewhere the block reward never stopped nor decreased, and that would have made somewhat sense, solving this problem. I'm quite puzzled they didn't think about it. – o0'. – 2012-01-04T12:27:37.343
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My answer here: http://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/1396/how-many-namecoins-are-generated-per-block was originally based on flawed information and was wrong. At the time, there was very little info in the Namecoin FAQ, so the best I could manage was to go by what I found in the forums. I corrected it on Dec 28th 2011.
– Highly Irregular – 2012-01-16T18:41:55.560