Be prepared for the .asia Domain Rush!

July 5, 2007

The new .asia TLD is designed to give businesses and groups located in Asia an alternative to America’s .com web extension . With over 409 million Asian internet users, compared to 319 million European and 231 American users, the new .asia TLD will represent a major gateway into the world’s largest and fast growing online population.

Jonathan Robinson, the chief operating officer of NetNames, said: “With the .asia launch date confirmed, businesses need to ensure they protect their brands from the new threats and maximize any opportunities to build their brands in the growing Asian market. Many brands lost out in dramatic fashion during the launch of .eu because they didn’t take the issue seriously enough until the eleventh hour.”

Applications for .asia domain names will be split into three phases in an effort to avoid the free-for-all that accompanied the launch of .eu.

  • Starting October 9, companies will be allowed to secure registered trademarks.
  • In the same phase, governments will also be able to register web addresses.
  • From November 13, companies that have secured their trademarks will be invited to secure additional domain names related specifically to their line of business.
  • At the same time, registered companies with an official presence in Asia will also be able to secure their business or other trading names, whether or not they are trademarked.
  • The .asia domain name will then open to the public next February.

For more information and to register your .asia domains please visit www.asiadns.com


Domain Name Auction NYC

June 22, 2007

Some results from the Auction in New York:

- VintageAirplanes.com   5,700,-
- StageRental.com   —
- Toy.net   26,000,-
- StockTrades.com   25,000,-
- BondFund.com  12,000,-
- IrishWhiskey.com  8,000,-
- BakingSuppliers.com
- PrivateTutors.com 16,000,-
- PrivatePilots.com  20,000,-
- Historian.com 25,000,-
- TechnologyFund 10,000,-
- PinkRoses.com  10,000,-
- VintageMotorcycles.com  14,000,-
- Booksellers.com  25,000,-
- Houses.net 75,000,-
- comicbooks.com  —–
- supplies.com  —
- Breathalyzer.com  —-
- invest.net
- px.net –
- tightrope.com 18,000,-
- sale.mobi
- AutoClassifieds.com  —
- Six.com  —
- Scotland.com  —
- Pedestrians.com
- EgyptianPyramids.com 75,000,-
- rentalproperty.org
- clap.com 21,000,-
- TattooParlor.com —


DotAsia start-up now set for September 2007

June 20, 2007

DomainesInfo reports the start of the DotAsia sunrise period has been delayed by one month, with the staged registration process beginning in September 2007.Dates for the three stage launch are:

  • September 7, 2007: Sunrise 1 reserved for registration of names by Governments and Public Bodies
  • October 7, 2007: Sunrise 2 reserved for intellectual property holders subdivided into three sub-periods
  • November 7, 2007: Sunrise 3 reserved for names of companies and organizations within the DotAsia region
  • February 8, 2008: Landrush Anyone meeting the DotAsia charter eligibility requirements may apply for any domain name. Premium prices will apply during this period.
  • March 2008: Go Live.

CitizenHawk TypoAlert: Cybersquatting Plagues Online Kids’ Sites

June 20, 2007

CitizenHawk is encouraging top children’s brand holders to take a more active role in policing their brands against cybersquatting in this news release. As a reminder of the urgency of the problem, the company today issued a TypoAlert revealing thousands of instances of cybersquatting on ten of the top learning and entertainment web sites for young children. The following is a list of top online kids’ sites and an estimate of the number of potentially trademark-infringing domains on each brand:

Bank Domains
Cartoon Network 537
ClubPenguin 628
Disney 247
DiscoveryKids 225
FunBrain 398
Nickelodeon 318
NickJr 199
PBSKids 349
Webkinz 255

“Cybersquatting on kids’ sites is a particularly insidious and dangerous practice, because cybersquatters are not only stealing traffic from legitimate brand holders, but are also in a position to expose children to inappropriate or harmful content,” said Graham MacRobie, co-founder, president and chief executive officer of CitizenHawk. “We encourage brand holders in this market to immediately address misuse of their trademarks online, to help ensure safety of kids online and to maintain the integrity of their brands.”


Fancy buying Scotland for £2m?

June 12, 2007

SCOTLAND will go on sale at an auction in New York with a price tag of offers over £2 million, The Scotsman can reveal.

But it is not the whole country up for grabs – just the internet domain name of scotland.com.

Chris Leggat, of the United States-based company moniker. com, which acts as an internet name broker, said the name would go up for sale at a major conference for domain owners in New York this month.

Mr Leggatt – whose father emigrated to America from Glasgow – said: “There is only one Scotland, so that makes scotland.com extremely valuable.” The site is owned by a Seattle firm, which registered it in 1995 for what could have been as little as £75. Mr Leggatt said the site featured some tourist content, but the domain was under-utilised, although it still attracts a million hits a month.

“It was bought purely for commercial reasons and has enormous potential,” he said. “Scotland is a great place and people want to know about it. I would like it to come back to Scotland.”

Although the auction is being held in New York, bids will be accepted from all over the world.

Struan Robertson, a technology law expert with Pinsent Mason in Glasgow, said: “This is a huge business, but the people who are active in these kind of sales tend to be professionals.

“Their business is buying and selling these names and using the names they hold to generate advertising income.”

Mr Robertson said that some domain names had raised huge sums for their owners. He doubted that scotland.com would attract multi-million dollar bids, but said it “should certainly get into six figures”.


The Three Letter dotcom Report

June 7, 2007

The focus of this report is to analyze and determine the current and future market state of domain names consisting of three consecutive letters within the .com top level domain.

The data from this report can be located at NameBio.com and consists of domain sales from Afternic.com, Sedo.com, BuyDomains.com, TDNAM.com, DNJournal.com, SnapNames.com, Pool.com and ClubDrop.com.  In the last 60 days, there have been 33  publicly reported domain sales consisting of three letter  dot coms (referred to as LLL.com’s from this point forward)  Here is a breakdown of how these domains are being used by their current owners:

 

Number of Domains

How they are currently used 1 Forwarded
1 Does not Resolve
4 End User / Websites
27 Parked

As it would seem from the chart above, a little less than 82% of these domain names were purchased by domain investors and setup on parking services. Only 12% of LLL.com’s purchased in the last 60 days ended up as actual websites.

Of the four domain names that ended up in the hands of end-users, 2 of them were in the top 3 reported domain sales (AMT.com: $100,000 and BCF.com: $71,200). The only domain sale that was higher was for Rex.com: $395,000. Although this domain name is somewhat developed, it is basically an elaborate parked page, and is included in the parked domain figures.

Of the 33 domain sales, only 2 of them were for below $4,000 dollars (JHW.com: $2,200 and VKY.com: $3,498). The sale of JHW.com was well below the standard resale value and we wanted to know why.

We spoke with Andrew Gugel the current registrant owner of the domain name to find out about the circumstances of the sale. After speaking to him, he clarified that he purchased the domain name sometime in mid May for $5,700 on ebay. As it turns out, the sale on Afternic may have been from the original domain owner, selling it to the first offer he received.  

 If we remove the sales data from the JHW.com we begin to see a pattern of sales develop between $4,000 and $7,000 dollars. These appear to be domain names with what are considered “weak” letters. Weak letters consist of the following: J, K, Q, U, V, W, X, Y, and Z. They are considered weak due to the difficulty in finding acronyms that use these letters. Every domain name that sold for less than $7,000 contained atleast one of these letters. Out of the top 10 domain sales during this period, only 3 contained a “weak” letter, and of those three domain sales, 1 of the domains was a popular first name and one was a  word (REX.com and PUP.com).  

 To determine the wholesale pricing of LLL.com domain names, we reviewed the bottom 5 domain sales (not including JHW.com). The mean price of these domain names is $4,085.20. Based on our research we will conclude that a minimum wholesale price of LLL.com’s is the same as the mean and should be approximately: $4,085.20


Cameroon strikes it rich on the internet

May 31, 2007

Cameroon’s .cm web address has created an unexpected source of revenue for the West African nation

The Republic of Cameroon is blessed with many natural riches – among them copious quantities of coffee, cocoa and crude oil.

To these more traditional sources of wealth the West African country has recently added a new income stream: the royalties from one of the most lucrative internet country codes in the world.

Cameroon’s .cm suffix is a common mistyping of the most popular top level domain, .com, meaning that each day thousands of internet users searching for .com sites are directed Cameroonian web addresses which do not exist.

Typically when a browser is unable to locate the site among the 200 or so .cm sites that are registered, an error message is displayed.

Under a deal signed by the Cameroonian Government in the middle of last year, however, any request for a .cm sites that is not registered is now sent to a ‘parking’ page where adverts relevant to the site the user intended to visit are displayed.

Type in almost any .cm address, including company names (microsoft.cm) and themes (party.cm; beer.cm) and the browser will be redirected to an advertising-laden page called ‘agoga.com’.

The deal, struck with a Canadian internet entrepreneur who owns more than 300,000 domain names, was seen by the Government as a chance to capitalise on the unexpected value of the .cm domain, the country’s largest internet service provider said.

Only an estimated 10,000 of the Cameroon’s 18 million citizens have internet connections, and the majority of the .cm addresses that are registered with the Government agency that runs the country’s server, ANTIC, are official sites.

‘Typo-squatting’ – the purchasing of domain names which are similar to hugely popular addresses to take advantage when users mistype – is recognised as a lucrative source of advertising revenue.

Under the deal reached with Cameroon, however, any request for an unregistered .cm site will default to Agoga’s site – as opposed to the company having to own the domain name, meaning that the number of searches from which Agoga will benefit is potentially limitless.

“We can continue to register legitimate .cm names – it’s just when a page doesn’t exist that the person searching is sent automatically to Agoga,” a spokesman for Cameroon’s largest internet service provider (ISP), Camtel, told Times Online from Yaounde.

Cameroon is the latest in a succession of countries to have benefited financially from the licensing of their country codes.

In 1998, the south Pacific nation of Tuvalu, which owned the rights to .tv, signed a 12-year deal worth $50 million with the .tv corporation as a way of supplementing the income from its exports of copra, a form of dried coconut.

Kevin Ham, the Vancouver-born businessman who runs agoga.com, is understood to earn more than $70 million a year from his collection of domain names, which includes god.com and satan.com.

Mr Ham, whose sites reportedly receive 30 million unique visitors a month, is said to be negotiating similar deals with Colombia (.co), Oman (.om), Niger (.ne), and Ethiopia (.et).

Bloggers criticised Agoga’s business as “sneaky” and “not in the spirit of the internet”.

“It’s a total disservice to internet users and to brand names which doesn’t provide any benefit to anyone,” David Ulevitch, chief executive of OpenDNS, a company which redirects users to the correct site when they mistype a domain name, said.

A writer on the blog ‘Swan Fungus’ said: “I wonder if these people’s brains work on a different plane, where the sole focus in on dishonorable ways to make a quick buck.”

On its website, Agoga describes its service as “providing top level domain controllers with a way to earn money from the otherwise unused segment of the domain,” and offers a way for companies who feel the service infringes their trademark to get in touch.

Neither Agoga nor the Cameroonian National Agency for Information and Communication Technology (ANTIC) were available for comment.


World’s leading weather site “goes .mobi”?

May 29, 2007

World’s leading weather site “goes .mobi”?

By Dotmobiz on 27 May 2007 at 18:21

AccuWeather, the world’s leading Internet weather provider, has plans to make AccuWeather.mobi their default mobile page.

That is dotMobiz’ conclusion after seeing an announcement on their .com webpage. The company still advertises wap.accuweather.com, but dotMobiz spotted the following:

To access the AccuWeather.com Mobile Website…
Simply launch the Internet browser found on your mobile device, choose to enter an URL and, using the keypad on your device, enter www.accuweather.mobi. Use the navigation keys found on your device to browse the site, read news articles, zoom radar, and more. Be sure to bookmark the site on your device for quick and easy access at any time.

AccuWeather, established in 1962, is the World’s Weather Authority. The Company provides local forecasts for everywhere in the United States and over two million locations worldwide. AccuWeather also provides products and services to more than 250,000 paying customers in media (numerous radio stations and newspapers), business, government and institutions.

AccuWeather.com is one of the worlds most visited PC and mobile weather websites.

mobi dotmobi accuweather.mobi mobiWorld Traffic rank: 1,077

The Announcement

Emulator for AccuWeather.mobi

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Below you can find the list of all the .mobi domains that made it through the Moniker T.R.A.F.F.I.C. Silent or Live auction.

May 29, 2007
.mobi Domain Category

World’s leading weather site “goes .mobi”?

May 28, 2007

AccuWeather, the world’s leading Internet weather provider, has plans to make AccuWeather.mobi their default mobile page.

That is dotMobiz’ conclusion after seeing an announcement on their .com webpage. The company still advertises wap.accuweather.com, but dotMobiz spotted the following:

To access the AccuWeather.com Mobile Website…
Simply launch the Internet browser found on your mobile device, choose to enter an URL and, using the keypad on your device, enter www.accuweather.mobi. Use the navigation keys found on your device to browse the site, read news articles, zoom radar, and more. Be sure to bookmark the site on your device for quick and easy access at any time.

AccuWeather, established in 1962, is the World’s Weather Authority. The Company provides local forecasts for everywhere in the United States and over two million locations worldwide. AccuWeather also provides products and services to more than 250,000 paying customers in media (numerous radio stations and newspapers), business, government and institutions.

AccuWeather.com is one of the worlds most visited PC and mobile weather websites.