Pumping Up The Domain Name Speculation Bubble
from the buy-and-hold dept
A few weeks ago, USA Today wrote about how much money there was in domain name speculation. Now, the same author is taking a look at the people behind the business. They view the business the same way a lot of people view real estate investment, that it's as easy as buying a property up, sitting on it, and then -- voila -- selling it for more later. As we noted before, there seems to be a total lack of skepticism about the strength of the market among the participants and by the author of the article. There are trends that may undercut the value of the market such as greater use of search engines (are people still just typing in clothes.com when they're looking for an online clothing retailer?). Also, ICANN isn't slowing down on approving new domain name suffixes, each time diluting the value of the existing ones. Perhaps their naiveté is actually a shrewd business strategy. Almost any time a domain name speculator is interviewed in an article, they seem to go out of their way to talk about how easy the business is and how anyone can do it, which sounds like a tacit invitation for fresh fools to keep bidding domains up. As with anything else, anytime you start hearing how easy it is to make money, and how anyone can do it, it pays to be cautious. Hmm, is there any way to short domain names?Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Domain Name tom-foolery
He explains another way people are making money on domain schemes.
Not illegal, but not nice either....
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Shorter names?
How about http://www.shorturl.com/ :^)
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Re: Shorter names?
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Re: Shorter names?
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most domain name lookup sites illegally sell data
Somebody call the DA already on these people.
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Starting an appraisal business for stupid people
I should start up a domain appraisal business for all the idiots quitting their day jobs to open an ebay store in their basement. I am sure I can schuck Thirty bucks for a worthless appraisal saying how valuable their online property is.
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Re: Starting an appraisal business for stupid peop
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Profits?
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Re: Profits?
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Tikiti
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Re: Tikiti
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Sometimes it is just a impulse purchase
I use it, but I would sell it in an instant for a decent buck.
I also bought http://ConsumerEnergyAudit.com for the same reason. I thought I was going to sell it as part of a website deal. I just kept the website and stuff for myself in the end.
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Murmp.com
Bids anyone?
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Not like real estate
When you squat on domains.. you pay $9 to godaddy, then turn around and sell it for thousands.
I don't have a lot of money and whenever i am searching for a new domain for some new web project, it takes me forever to find a decent name because they are all taken by squatters!
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The Domain Game
.mobi may be an interesting new one, if it's adopted as planned to signify sites optimized for display on mobile devices.
For an explanation of how to get an expired domain name, this is the best description I've ever read:
http://www.mikeindustries.com/blog/archive/2005/03/how-to-snatch-an-expiring-domain.php
Chris Parente
www.gotostrategic.com
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Domains is BIG.
Domains can sell for 10.00-1 million+ (dollars)
It's happened before and can happen again. Since a shorter domain name means people are more likley to remember it, more people will come back each day (especially for companys). This is the same reason behind "cool" domains.
Not anyone good do it. Some people might put in 6 random keys "aaa
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Expensive names
Business.com – $7.5 million
AsSeenOnTv.com – $5.1 million
Altavista.com – $3.3 million
Wine.com – $2.9 million
Autos.com – $2.2 million
I am not sure how such an investment – paying millions of USD for a simple name – can be recovered and used to produce profit. There was a story about Coca-Cola, which said that if the company lost all its infrastructure, but kept the name and brand characteristics, it could bounce back in about 4 years. However, if the company managers were left with all the infrastructure, but lost the Coca-Cola name, the company would be very likely to go bankrupt. Do you think this is also true for domain names?
Regards,
Michael Rad
Web2earn.com – learn how to make money online
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The Real Story
Diamond.com just recently sold for $7.5 million.
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Domain name:
Short, catchy, and memorable, five letter domain name that has many uses.
Comments on its value anyone?
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This industry is alot harder than it sounds
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This results in a massive amount of cybersquatting which helps nothing.
If you can't make a useful webpage and a bunch of links isn't a useful webpage and it's easy to see a page that is links and google adwords it's worthless
This needs to be stopped.
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