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Some Registrars Offer NO Expiration Period on Domains

This came to me from a reader who just got this expiration notice from a Snapnames.com registrar: (domain info deleted)

“””””You registered the domain ….. on 2008-03-29 18:08:57 UTC and it will expire on 2009-03-29. If you want renew your domain for one year please send us 12 € (EUR) with paypal (www.paypal.com) to our paypal account domainrenew@dns-net.de.

Please write your domain name in the subject line from paypal. If you have allways pay the renew fee, please contact us, we will check, why you get this renew notification again.

IMPORTANT INFORMATION – Please read follow information INTENTLY!

We DON’T offer an autorenew grace period. UNPAID DOMAINS WILL BE DELETED ONE DAY AFTER EXPIRATION DATE.

Your domain is after this deletion in status redemption period. You can reactivate your domain until the end of the redemptation period, the service charge for reactivation is 100€ (EUR),prepaid.

If we get no payment from you until 2009-03-29 we will delete your domain…… a day later.””””

Another abuse we allowed registrars to heap upon us.

So if your a day late you have to pay 100 Euro’s to redeem your domain,  since there is no grace period.

This is another example of what happens when your registrar has a vested interest in you not renewing your domain to they can get you for huge redemption fees or better yet to keep or auction your domain off.

By the way these registrars just hope their notice lands in your junk mail account.

At least the Euro is down 20% from its summer highs.



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Maybe Someone Other Than Microsoft Wants Yahoo

The Wall Street Journal is reporting that the former Chief Executive at AOL,  Jonathan Miller is trying to raise $30 Billion to purchase Yahoo for $20-$22 a share.

The Journal reports that he has been talking to private equity investors and sovereign wealth funds for months in hopes of raising money for a deal.

Yahoo shares are up $.55 today on the news



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TheDomains.com Turkeys Of The Year Award

First I want to wish all of you and your families a great thanksgiving, as we all have so much to be thankful for.  With so many people out of work; losing their homes, companies out of business and retirement plans wiped out, as an industry, we are very, very fortunate.

I see many TV shows giving out their “Turkeys of the Year” award.

Here are thedomains.com Turkeys of the Year:

1.  The Governor of Kentucky, Steve Beshear for seizing domain names, he clearly had no jurisdiction over for purely political purposes and to support the states own online gambling interests,  and Judge Wingate for for going along with this nonsense and not upholding the US constitution.

2.  ICANN.  Do we really need hundreds of new extensions, or thousands of them.  This roll out is going to cause mass confusion and tons of trademark problems.  The potential for these trademark problems will cause trademark holders to go to capital hill next year, to get additional protection for them on causing a nightmare for all domain holders.

3.  Tucows.  According to ICANN it’s perfectly fine, for now, for registrars to take the expired domains of their own customers and keep the domains for themselves.  Tucows.com has been on the cutting edge when it comes to keeping their customers domains, numbering several hundreds thousand and now resells the best of them, on a site owned by them, for prices in the six figures.  Legally fine, morally horrible.

4.  CADNA, and the Snowe Bill.  There is nothing wrong with trademark holders wanting to protect their interest.  However, when they want to start controlling generic, geo and other clearly not trademarked terms and start putting people in jail for violating civil matters, they are going beyond protecting their brands and moving towards taking things they have no right to.

5.  Bad Decisions on domain cases.  We have seen them all year Cases where you would never think a domain would be taken from the holder on some claim of right.  My picks as the 2 worst of the year go to LH.com and ChilliBeans.com.

6.   Yahoo.  Not taking $33 a share when your stock was trading at $20, is well just plain silly. Now that the stock trades at $10, its just plain stupid.  Believing that entering into a deal with Google which was never going to be approved as an alternative to Yahoo was ridiculous.

7.   Microsoft.  Google just celebrated it’s 10th anniversary.  Microsoft still has not gotten into the game.  They continue to pass on a Yahoo deal at $20 now or 40% less than they were willing to pay in January which would get them into the game, instead opting to change the name of platform from Live.com to Kumo.com.  Sure, that will help a lot.  Oh Yeah they also have make a great product called Vista.

8.  Toyota.me.  There were many trademarked domains that went for five figures at the .me release auctions, however the highest selling .me domain on record is still Toyota.me.  Several of the big money trademark domains have already been transferred to the trademark holders and more are to come.  One things for sure, godaddy.com gets to keep the money they got for selling these infringing domains.

9.  WallStreet.  Greed, corpution, bad judgement, horrible decision making, leave us with trillions of dollars out of investors pockets, retirement plans and the economy.

10.  The Mortgage Industry.  Giving of loans to people they knew could not afford the payments, interest only loans, negative amortization loans, no money down loans, forging documents, sex for loans, the list of abuses, goes on and on.  Many people benefited from this. From mortgage brokers to the people taking out the “equity” in there homes and pissing the money away, only to ask the government now for relief as there homes are now worth less than they owe.

If you have any Turkeys you think should be added, nominations are now offically opened for the Turkeys of the Year award.  Please feel free to comment and have a great holiday.



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Google To “Significantly Reduce Contractors”

According to CNET,  Google is going to make a major reduction in the 10,000 contractors they use:

“We have 10,000, and we have had a plan in place for awhile to significantly reduce that number, This is something we’ve been thinking about for awhile–six or seven months. It predates the most acute phase of the (present economic) crisis.”

In an interview, Google co-founder Sergey Brin said the company has been concerned about its high contracting expense. Brin said Google augments its workforce of 20,123 employees with about 10,000 contractors.

“It’s really high,” Brin said of the number of contractors. He said Google began looking at the number six months ago and has a plan to significantly reduce that number through vendor management, converting some contractors to regular employees, and other approaches.

Whether the contractor cutting predates the economic downturn or not, Google’s been cutting cost a plenty as of late, a few days ago Google announced that it was reducing its budget for holiday parties and travel for its executives.



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Verizon to Sell and Release Up To 100,000 Domains

According ot FariWinds Partners Press Release,  FairWinds Partners, a member of CADNA, has been working with Verizon Communications to develop and implement an innovative approach to optimizing Verizon’s domain portfolio.

“”””Verizon’s domain name portfolio strategy has enabled cuts of over $1.1million in unnecessary spending while at the same time increasing incoming revenue and the overall strength of the brand. Verizon and FairWinds worked together to halt the wasteful registration of domains which offered little or no value to the company. It is estimated that it would have cost Verizon$725,000 over the next two years to maintain the unproductive domain names it cut from its portfolio.””””

“”””In the past, domains that generated little traffic, including some that were hugely expensive to maintain over time, were added to the portfolio”””” said Sarah Deutsch, Vice President & Associate General Counsel of Verizon Communications.

“””Moving forward, we are making a concerted effort to be vigilant in our efforts to create a targeted and effective portfolio.”””

In addition to the cuts made to the portfolio, the two companies together identified unbranded domains owned by Verizon that were not critical to Verizon’s online strategy and may be desirable to other companies. As a result of these efforts, Verizon can now broker these unneeded domains to third parties to produce as much as $2 million in new cash which can be applied to other areas of the business or returned to shareholders.

These savings highlight important ways in which other companies can retool their domain name program to increase brand visibility, cut wasteful expenditures and identify new sources of revenue. Verizon will be able to bring in approximately 3 million new visitors for its Web sites with its new strategy, often by redirecting domains in order to provide customers with expected content.

“We want to make sure that our customers get to where they want to be on the first try,” said Brian Price, Executive Director of Verizon’s Online Center of Excellence. This provides a better experience for customers and benefits the company as well. “The top ten domains that we redirected have garnered a quarter of a million visitors and over 1K sales in the last six weeks alone.”

Interesting that a company like Verizon, another member of CADNA, need help to anaylsis what domains they need to keep.

Verizon did not say how they plan on selling these domains.

Based of its “savings” of $725,000 we can assume that they are selling or releasing 100,000 domains or if they are paying top dollar for their domains of $35 per year, they would be selling or releasing over 20,000 domains.

Anyway you look at it, that is a lot of domains

Also I wonder if any “trademark” infringing” domains, are going to be released in the cost savings measure and if so I further question whether the legal costs of then regaining those domains, that make no money but which Verizon will chase down has been taken into account.



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Live Current Reports Earnings

Live Current Media Inc. a member of our Domain Stock Parking Index announced earnings for the third quarter, ending September 30, 2008.

Here are the highlights

  • Record Q3 revenue of $1.95 million, driven by significant sales growth in the health and beauty segment.
  • Record Q3 Perfume.com revenue of $1.93 million, an increase of 29% compared to Q3 of 2007, marking the fourth consecutive quarter with quarterly year-over-year revenue growth of more than 27%.

Also in this quarter the company announced a partnership with Domain Strategies, Inc., a leading internet development and management company, to jointly establish a new company for the purpose of building, managing and monetizing the www.karate.com domain name owned by Live Current. Management expects this will be a model for future partnerships for much of the Company’s valuable domain name portfolio.

The company also entered into an agreement with Palo Alto-based investment bank Arbor Advisors, LLC to sell six of the Company’s, non-core, but highly valuable dot-com domain names from its portfolio of more than 800 domains. Live Current expects to negotiate transactions for the sale of some or all of the six domain names within the next 60 days.

Geoffrey Hampson, Chairman and CEO of Live Current, said, “In the third quarter, we saw continued strong growth in our core health and beauty business as well as achieving important milestones in our emerging cricket media business. Both of our core business units are now well positioned for near-term growth. Despite challenging market conditions, Perfume.com is well positioned for continued growth during the fourth quarter holiday season, our busiest and most important time of the year.

GCV will launch additional exclusive cricket properties over the next several quarters, including the official website of the Champions League Twenty20.” Hampson further stated, “The value of our portfolio of exclusive digital cricket content and properties continues to grow as we launch the sites. The interest and level of engagement around cricket and, in particular, the new T20 format is astounding. The massive level of fan support and investment by major global media brands that has recently taken place bodes well for the monetization of the unrivaled set of rights acquired by GCV.”

Live Current  is currently trading at $.60 a share, down $.05 today and well below its 52 week high of $3.48



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Now Enom Has A Site To Sell Its Own Domain Inventory: Where Did These Domains Come From?

Following on the heals of Tucows launch of YummyNames.com,  to sell expired domains of its customers, Tucows elected to keep, today we notice that Enom has launched  AcquireThisName.com.

Enom is not taking credit for this site, at least not directly.

If you click on the “about us” link you get this:

Q: Do you own the domains you sell?
A: No, we represent the domain owner and facilitate the sale of the domain.
Q: Is AcquireThisName a domain registrar?
A: No, AcquireThisName is a brokerage firm, representing domain owners. We are not a registrar and do not offer registration services.

In my opinion, this site can best be described with one word, which is actually listed as a “popular domain” on their site; shifty.com

In the FAQ section it becomes clear who your dealing with when dealing with AcquireThisName.com:

Q: What are the payment options available to me?
A: Our preferred method of payment is by wire to our affiliate, eNom. It is the easiest and most cost effective method.

Further on the site it says:

“”””Our reseller relationship with eNom helps make purchasing a domain from Acquire This Name a quick and easy process. After you and your ATN sales account manager agree on a purchase price, you will receive an email with wire instructions and a link to submit our online agreement. The online agreement confirms your interest in the domain and removes it from the open marketplace.”””

“””The next step is creating a free account at www.enomcentral.com. After payment is submitted by wire to eNom, the domain will immediately be pushed to your eNom account.””

Ok so its clear Enom owns this “brokerage site”, that “does not own any domains, and is not a registrar”.

Now as to who owns the domains themselves, well that appears to be Enom as well.

Doing a quick check on many of the domains listed on the first page of the site, they are all registered to:

Registrant Contact:
Whois Privacy Protection Service, Inc.
Whois Agent
PMB 368, 14150 NE 20th St – F1
Bellevue, WA 98007

And all the domains have Enom default servers:
dns1.name-services.com

dns2.name-services.com

dns3.name-services.com

dns4.name-services.com

So now, if its clear Enom own the brokerage service,  which again is “not a registrar and doesn’t own any domains”, and if all the domains on the site are owned by Enom, (which is a domain registrar but not a brokerage site) then the only question is where did all these domains come from?

Are the domain being sold,  domains Enom acquired by purchase from third parties, or hand registered or by being the highest bidder at drop auctions and other aftermarket auctions, or are these expired domain of  their customers?

I’m sure one of the industrious readers of this blog will go to domainTools.com and figure that one out.

However, if these domains were acquired by Enom, fair and square and not from their own customers,  then why all the deception, and not just offer these domains for sale through Enom?

Is this another example of registrar abuse?

Certainly, this maybe  another reason for all domainers to take a long hard look at which companies they choose to do business with.

Certainly this maybe another reason for domainers to demand that change to the way that dropped domains are handled.

Having just went through six months of nothing but talk of change, maybe its time that domainers demand change in the domain industry.

Maybe its time domainers demand the end of game playing, role playing and word games,  and demand transparency instead.

Maybe that’s the change we need.

Maybe that’s the change we can believe in.



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It’s Time For Drop Services To Drop There Prices Minimum Price For Back Ordered Domains

As we all know economics of the domain industry have changed.

Parking revenues are down 50% or more from 2007.

This week we reported according to VeriSign that domain new registration are down, due largely to less registrations by domainers.

In public reports by Fabulous.com, their parking revenue have fallen by more than 50%, and continue to fall each quarter.

It’s time for the drop services to recognize the changed economic conditions and drop there minimum bid prices on back orders.

Currently NameJet.com charge $69 as a minimum price on any domain.

NameJet.com is the outgrowth of the old Enom’s in-house bidding system,  for their own dropped domains.

When the old Enom auction was running, the minimum bid was $5.

SnapNames.com minimum bid for back orders ranges between $59-$79 depending on which registrar is dropping the domain.

Pool.com charges $60 minimum for back orders.

On the other hand, TDNAM.com. GoDaddy’s in house drop system starts the bidding for most of their drop domains at $10. (however for high traffic domains they set an opening price based on their projected PPC earnings for one year).

I suggest that NameJet and SnapNames follow the current economic trend which finds domainers losing 1/2 of their revenue and slash the minimum back order prices to $29 and certainly no more than $39 per.

To be clear we are talking about domains that wind up only having one backorder placed on it.

Any domain that has multiple back orders go into auction and those participant determine the price the domain will sell for.

However where the domain is such, that it draws interest from only one person in the domaining community, charging almost 10X more that the cost of a new registration, is just way too much.

If someone, instead of being the only one to back order a domain, waits for it to drop, they can pick it up for $8.

Do this with 100 domains and you just saved $5,200, do it with 1,000 domains and you save $52,000.

Yes when times were good and everyone was making money, costs of acquisitions went up.

Now that the economy has turned south its time for the market to recognize it, and reduce prices.



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Kentucky File Response to iMEGA In Domain Seizure Case

Today the Commonwealth of Kentucky filed a response to iMEGA motion for Intermediate relief with the Kentucky Court of Appeals.

The Commonwealth main arguments are that iMEGA does not have standing to represent any of the domain names as they are not the owner of any of the domains. iMEGA is a trade association who according to the Commonwealth, “has not identified a single domain defendant which is owned or operated by one if its members”.

The Commonwealth second basis for asking the Appeals court to deny iMEGA petition is that the trial court by its own decision, is stayed until the forfeiture hearing scheduled for December 3rd is heard.

Therefore the Commonwealth contends there is no irreparable injury that can be shown since all action is stayed until the hearing and that all DNS information is current and all sites resolve.

The Commonwealth refutes the argument that the court violated the first amendment right to free speech saying that gambling is illegal and therefore there is no first amendment right to free speech when the activity is illegal.

The Commonwealth make no attempt to distinguish the activities of the “illegal gambling sites” from Kentucky own “legal” gambling site Twinspires.com



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What Does The New US Administration Mean For The Domain Industry?

A reader suggested I address what effect the new administration may have on the domain industry.

I don’t want this to turn into a political discussion.

I don’t want to hear what could have been, should have been or would have been.

I don’t want to hear about what Bush did or didn’t do.

I don’t want to hear about what McCain would have done.

The election is over, we have a president elect and now all that matters is what the new administration will do and how its policies will effect the domain industry and domainers.

First we can look forward to the establishment of the office of Chief Technology Officer, which will be a cabinet-level position, which will “”help federal agencies implement the latest technology tools and practices and will serve as a link between government IT and the wider tech sector.””

There is plenty of speculation, over who will become the country’s first Chief Technology Officer.

Leading candidates include Google’s CEO (and vocal Obama supporter) Eric Schmidt, Internet guru Vint Cerf, former Federal Communications Commission Chairman Reed Hundt, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, Princeton computer science professor Ed Felten, and Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer.

Whoever becomes Chief Technology Officer, Silicon Valley is expected to have the ear of the president during the coming years. According to he Center For Responsive Politics,  employees at Microsoft and Google were amongst Obama’s top campaign contributors.

Obama’s technology strategy includes making government data easily accessible online, making the research and development tax credit permanent, and extending broadband access to all Americans, including “affordable broadband” and “previously un-served communities”.

More broadband access, especially for those who may not have had any real Internet access, will translate into more Internet users, which is always good for domain holders.

I think it is fair to say that no President has ever had a better understanding of the Internet, and its importance in the world economy.

However, emphasis on technology in the new administration can also hurt domainers.

From Wall Street to Silicone Valley there is going to be a lot more governmental regulation.

We certainly think that CADNA will get the ear of Congress to strengthen the Anti-Cybersquatting Consumer Protection Act (ACPA) (passed during the last Democratic presidency, 1999).  The Snowe Biil that was introduced last year, will make a return in the next Congress as part of an amendment to the ACPA.  Look for trademark holders ask Congress to substantially increase the top fines for violation from the current $100K,  to an amount of in the seven figures.

I also look for an attempt to add criminal penalties for violation of the ACPA.

I also think the definition of terms given protection will try to be broaden to include terms, including those similar to governmental bodies, (IRS.com for example) and stretch the definition of what is trademark infringement.

Following the Snowe bill, you might see other previously non-trademarkable terms gain some protection.

As Hollywood was strongly behind Obama, I think you will see additional strengthening of all intellectual  property including copyrights, music and movies rights, and increased penalties for the sale of “Counterfeit” merchandise.

In a video released in the last days of his campaign, Obama promised to enforce tough antitrust laws “to keep the door open for the next-generation of startups.”

This would mean we would be unlikely to see a Yahoo-Microsoft deal get approved.  As we saw it was highly unlikely, even under the current administration, that a Google-Yahoo deal would get done.

Other combos in the tech field will be subject to much more scrutiny in the new administration.

Secondly taxes are going to increase.

This is going to negatively effect US domainers and give further spending power to those domainers living in tax free jurisdictions.

The question is whether the tax increase will come in the form of letting the current “Bush Tax cuts” expire at the end of 2010, as they are currently scheduled to, or whether the new administration will move for a tax increase effective as soon as July 1, 2009?

My guess is that that we will see a tax increase bill pass congress in early 2009 effective July 1, 2009.

Whenever the tax rate changes it will certainly almost double the capital gains rate from 15% to 28% for those with over $200K adjusted gross.

In the domain business everyone is one good domain sale away from the $200K level.

My guess it that the increased taxes will have a negative effect in the long run, but help increase sales in the short run, as people try to sell before the tax increase.

The top tax rate will rise 4 points and will take a few more bucks out of the top US domain holder pockets, once again leaving less to spend on domains, but that slack will be taken up by those top domainers in the tax free jurisdictions.

However higher taxes will effect all domainers, regardless of their income level.

Almost every parking company is located in the US.

The old saying goes, corporations do not pay taxes, people do.  Will increased tax obligation of parking companies wind up reducing payouts to domainers,  or will these companies simply absorb the tax ramifications?

My guess is higher taxes will be passed on to domainers in the form of reduced payments for traffic.

Moreover, lets not forget that the two companies that all parking companies derive their income from are US based and Google and Yahoo can expect to pay higher taxes in the new administration.

So for all that don’t believe in the “trickle down theory”, you may see it work in the opposite direction.  As taxes increase on corporations in the parking food chain, this will translate into lower revenue to domainers.  Lower revenue and higher taxes to domainers will lead to less cash being available for purchasing new domains.  I predict you will also see a much higher non-renewal rate of domains.

Thirdly, many in the world community have been asking for years that ICANN be moved out of US jurisdiction into control of a  “neutral country” such as Switzerland.

My opinion is that the New administration will not be as opposed to this idea as the current one.

I would say there is a 75% chance that the US will give up control of ICANN within the next 5 years.

Verisign’s current contract to administer the .com and .net registry runs well past the new administration term, through 2012.  So I do not see the central registry moving out of Virgina anytime soon.

However, the administration may cause a big change in the domain new extensions (gTLD’s).

As you may recall the .xxx extension was approved by ICANN and approaching final approval until the current administration blocked it on moral grounds.  The New administration should be much less likely to block a .xxx extension, or any new extensions on moral grounds.

Finally I see:

a.  The federal government supporting more Internet privacy. I don’t think you will see the next administration asking for records of people’s search patterns, as the current one did.

b.  Less enforcement of obscenity laws, which is good for the adult Internet industry.

c.  A strong possibility that Internet Gambling will be allowed in the US.  As you may know the World Trade Orgainzation has fined the US millions of dollars for prohibiting online gambling.  I think the new administration might take a different approach and allow online gambling, along with the rest of most of the world, and look to generate significant tax revenue from it.

This is how I see.

Now its time for you to weigh in.



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