Over the course of a decade, I have repeatedly assisted domain owners recover their stolen domains. Some were domainers, others were simply owners who woke up one morning to find that their accounts were compromised and their "intangible property" was gone. The first thing one needs to … [Read more...]
And this is why I don’t buy domains on weekends!
A rather alarming thread over at DNForum unravels the plight of a buyer from Turkey, who paid a four-figure sum for a LLLL .com domain. At least, that's what he thought he was getting. The seller, apparently posting from a hijacked member account, claimed that he was offering for sale the … [Read more...]
Spam, lies and videotape: Part 2
Part 1 of "Spam, Lies and Videotape" was an introduction to how information can be deceptive, and how anyone can claim to be someone, even promoting their location and address profoundly. But does it really matter where one resides? I suppose it does, when you want to achieve something of … [Read more...]
Domaining.com newsletter: “Top Headlines” are not truly top
After seeing a blog post syndicated on the Domaining.com feed appear in today's Newsletter that Francois Carrillo emails to subscribers, I just had to ask Francois: how do headlines get rated? My question makes sense: to appear in a sponsored headline in the Domaining.com newsletter, one has to … [Read more...]
Spam, lies and videotape: Part 1
The other day I received an email inquiry from a person with a long, antiquated name, and an even longer, pompous signature. He wanted me to price my single word .com domain - if it were for sale, of course. At the bottom of it all, Mr. Samuel Washington had signed with his address, in the … [Read more...]
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