IT.COM

Bidding on your own names at NameJet...?

Spaceship Spaceship
Watch
Once in awhile I see people bidding on their own domains at NJ. I would think it would be frowned upon.

Today's seems more obvious than normal. Or am I missing something here?

Airlinejobs.com owned by Andy Booth at Booth.com and high bidder is BQDNcom (James Booth).

3 bids down we see Boothcom as a bidder.

Same thing with MovieZone.com. Owned by Andy Booth in which he currently appears to be the high bidder.

High Bid: $2,475 USD by boothcom

They actually won their own domain airplanesforsale.com. Im guessing it didnt get as high as they wanted so needed to protect it.

Bidder Amount Date
bqdncom $2,001 7/17/2017 12:23 PM
boothcom $1,950 7/17/2017 12:23 PM
 
44
•••
The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
I think it is quite obvious who HKDN is or is connected to. The WHOIS appears to be for a non existent company in the Seychelles. Also the phone number is invalid. I connected the dots in an earlier post on this thread.
I meant an official confirmation from NJ. A person bidding hundreds of thousands...should be looked at carefully.
 
2
•••
I seriously don't think they do at all. Maybe for individuals, but I don't see how they would do it with some of the bigger promoted auctions. We've done a couple at DSAD, we handled the information and verification not namejet.

I agree Ike, I do not believe they verify individually they might need to change their systems.
 
1
•••
3
•••
1
•••
So is it to late to put names up for auction.
 
1
•••
I am very proud of the Namepros community for stepping up and starting to address issues. We do that at (DBR) DBR as well, people looking out for each other, and when snake oil salesmen enters the room, they get there ass kicked into next week, including some of the biggest domainers in the industry, so they look for noobies for there next con. But not here and not now, and not anymore, and not on our watch.

Also, once we have 100% proof of Oliver Hoger being a scum bag that I already knew with the NJ shilling bidding, let me know, because he has been active on 4.cn, and I will get his ass kicked out of there. Let me know?
 
Last edited:
5
•••
Someone with proper resource and skills should make a list of all the domains owned by Oliver and the Booth brothers and start a list so the community can blacklist them.
 
4
•••
This along with the other articles I posted show how pervasive and in this case is part of a system. Here is a shill operation in Real Estate. "A little known practice"... please......
It's a scummy system, that's what it is. Just like WallStreet.

http://www.ocregister.com/2014/07/29/realtors-seek-to-ban-shill-bids/

A little-known practice in which auction companies privately bid on the properties they’re selling is pitting two real estate groups against each other.

On the one side are real estate auction firms like Irvine-based Auction.com that defend the practice. On the other is the California Association of Realtors, which calls the practice “shill bidding.”

Real estate agents have complained for years about Auction.com, first about its practice of making seller bids and, more recently, about a program that second-guesses deals agents reach.

Now the two groups are battling over a Realtor-backed bill requiring real estate auction houses to disclose each bid they make on a seller’s behalf as the bid is made.

The measure, Assembly Bill 2039, passed the lower house of the Legislature and is pending before a state Senate committee.

Currently, it’s common for auction firms to make bids on behalf of a seller – without revealing the identity of the bidder – to get the price of a home or commercial property up to the “reserve,” or the minimum price needed for a sale to go through. If the reserve isn’t met, the auction house doesn’t get paid.

The real estate trade group wants the bids revealed, saying the current process creates an illusion that a bidding frenzy is taking place.

“Fake bids are submitted to artificially drive up the price,” said Alex Creel, the Realtor group’s chief lobbyist.

“It gets the competitive spirit going,” he added. “Once the bids start coming in, you think, ‘Wow. This must be really worth it’ … and you don’t know you’re bidding against a fake bid.”

But Auction.com Executive Vice President Rick Sharga said Realtors are blatantly misrepresenting what’s going on, implying that auctioneers are falsely ratcheting up the price.

“That’s not what we do; it’s not what any legitimate company does,” he said.

Auction.com long has disclosed on its website that it employs the tactic and openly defended its use in the past.

“It helps them get close to the reserve, so the seller can consider the deal,” Sharga said. “If you eliminate bidding on behalf of a seller, you cause a lot of these transactions to not take place. It’s not good for the buyer or the seller.”

Auction.com, which claims to be the nation’s biggest online real estate seller, is seeking to overhaul the traditional approach to home and commercial property sales by moving transactions online.

The firm sparked agents’ ire in the past couple of years with the creation of its “market validation program” to ensure that lenders get top dollar during short sales, or sales for less than is owed on a mortgage.

Under the program, lenders require that agents submit their short sale listing to an online auction after locating a buyer but before closing the deal.

Sharga said 57 percent of those auctions generated higher prices in California. In many cases, agents lost both the sale and their commission.

“It’s hard to argue (against) the benefit of selling a home at a higher price,” Sharga said.

During an interview last year, Auction.com co-founders Rob Friedman and Jeff Frieden maintained that submitting seller bids is common in the auction business.

“That’s not something we invented,” Friedman said, noting that Sotheby’s and other art auction houses do the same thing.

But Creel noted that eBay forbids “shill bidding,” which it defines as anytime “a seller – or someone associated with a seller – bids on that seller’s own item.”

“EBay is the biggest online auction there is, and they don’t allow shill bidding,” Creel said.

Sharga said Auction.com has made its disclosures more explicit on its website since AB2039 was introduced. But requiring individual disclosure each time a seller bid is made “would disrupt the process,’’ he said.

The tactic is not without risks. When the Register toured Auction.com’s bidding floor last year, a technician inadvertently placed a bid just as an outside buyer was submitting an offer at the reserve price. Auction.com ended up with the high bid.

Auction.com then was in the position of having to ask the buyer if he still wanted to pursue the deal at the price he last bid, with no guarantee of a sale.

Creel said that his trade group first looked into the issue after learning that sellers and lenders put sole control of the transaction with the auction house while requiring brokers to sign an indemnity agreement holding the seller harmless for any problem with the sale.

AB2039 forbids auction firms from requiring sellers and listing agents to sign indemnification agreements.

“We said, ‘Hey, look. You can’t take the transaction away and not take away the liability,’” Creel said.

Sharga said Auction.com would be willing to look at mutual indemnification language that protects both parties, but Auction.com would object to a law that eliminates seller bidding or mandated disclosure of seller bidding that disrupts the bidding process.

“I think we can all settle on some aspect of disclosure,” Sharga said. “The ongoing debate is how granular the disclosure needs to be.”
 
Last edited:
5
•••
I have been way from forums for a few years. Wow this place is Hot Hot Hot reminds me why wasted so much time in these places. Its a Joy to be back.
 
9
•••
I am very proud of the Namepros community for stepping up and starting to address issues. We do that at (DBR) DBR as well, people looking out for each other, and when snake oil salesmen enters the room, they get there ass kicked into next week, including some of the biggest domainers in the industry, so they look for noobies for there next con. But not here and not now, and not anymore, and not on our watch.

Also, once we have 100% proof of Oliver Hoger being a scum bag that I already knew with the NJ shilling bidding, let me know, because he has been active on 4.cn, and I will get his ass kicked out of there. Let me know?
I have just received a frightening response from NameJet support concerning the above. Seems as if they have known since earlier this year. Full text is quoted below with only the names retracted.

"Just following up in regard to our phone conversation earlier.

I met with XXXXXX regarding this, and she assured me that it was taken care of earlier this year. It did appear that the winner8888 alias may be associated with Oliver Hoger, and that account will no longer be bidding on those domains.
If you have any more recent examples of this type of behavior, please let us know.

If you have concerns regarding the auctions that already took place earlier this year, please continue to work with Jonathan directly.

Please feel free to reply back if you have any questions, or if there is anything else I can do for you.


Thanks,
XXXX"

I'm 99.9% convinced. Close enough.
 
1
•••
I have been way from forums for a few years. Wow this place is Hot Hot Hot reminds me why wasted so much time in these places. Its a Joy to be back.

I took a few years off from Namepros, forgot my login/pw, and had to resign up a couple years back again(lol) But IMO Namepros is much better now than back in 2006. Some great people here as well.
 
6
•••
1
•••
I think it is quite obvious who HKDN is or is connected to. The WHOIS appears to be for a non existent company in the Seychelles. Also the phone number is invalid. I connected the dots in an earlier post on this thread.
Report any inaccurate whois to icann.
Nice to see the playing field being leveled.
Thanks to Op and everyone for sharing this info, get some oil on the old cast iron frying pan lol
 
1
•••
This might be the longest forum thread I've read all my life. Every post, every link. Time well spent!

God bless you Namepros!

Now everytime I post "Welcome aboard :)" on Introduction pages, that smiley means a lot more. I'm proud to be a member of this awesome community!
 
12
•••
Thank you for sharing and this part is extremely damning.

Jonathan (@NameJetGM) has to resign tomorrow.
Yes, he should be fired. Time to backtrack this entire family circle, it is not isolated to one party, this seems like a network of people who have been profiting against the bids of others.

Given these were the most active users, and probably on a first name basis with the GM, and on a direct communication level on conflicts matters. Someone internally has to be held accountable.

I guess no Christmas bonuses this year, everyone who is in this inner circle should have their accounts blocked until this is settled.
 
Last edited:
1
•••
I am interested to hear what Frank Schilling has to say about all of this. One of the biggest spenders in NameJet history. I wonder what Frank thinks about all of this and if he is considering getting people to look into his buys?
 
2
•••
I am heading back to my startup, or whatever that's left of it.
Made a good fortune from domaining, in last 9 months.
But, more I dig, more it's looks like a crap shoot.
I have asked NameJet to refund me, if they don't, they better lawyer up.
Sometimes you just need to take a stand for what's right, would be willing to spend whatever that's left in my BoA company account.
And never let anybody make a fool out of you. It should hurt your ego.
 
4
•••
I am heading back to my startup, or whatever that's left of it.
Made a good fortune from domaining, in last 9 months.
But, more I dig, more it's looks like a crap shoot.
I have asked NameJet to refund me, if they don't, they better lawyer up.
Sometimes you just need to take a stand for what's right, would be willing to spend whatever that's left in my BoA company account.
And never let anybody make a fool out of you. It should hurt your ego.

Refund every purchase? Or you have proof that there were shills in auctions you won?
 
1
•••
I am interested to hear what Frank Schilling has to say about all of this. One of the biggest spenders in NameJet history. I wonder what Frank thinks about all of this and if he is considering getting people to look into his buys?
I am sure he will be auditing his purchases, and going legal if need be. He was a big investor in rightside prior to selling for a profit. I am sure he would not be to pleased as they are big buyers of 4Ls, then again they know what they want to pay, and bid their top offers.
 
Last edited:
1
•••
Refund every purchase? Or you have proof that there were shills in auctions you won?

Only those purchases where I have proof of shilling.
I have sent them those domains and the proofs.
 
4
•••
Only those purchases where I have proof of shilling.
I have sent them those domains and the proofs.
They would be liable to refund the difference of the bids, plus damages you could prove. They wouldn't be able to refund the whole amount without you returning the domain. A messy situation, and a lot of silence, I am sure Namejet is looking for loopholes to avoid any liability. You won't get anything from the parties involved, as they all work out of offshore locales.
 
2
•••
They would be liable to refund the difference of the bids, plus damages you could prove. They wouldn't be able to refund the whole amount without you returning the domain. A messy situation, and a lot of silence, I am sure Namejet is looking for loopholes to avoid any liability. You won't get anything from the parties involved, as they all work out of offshore locales.

I bought 4L .com domains only from Oliver. Maybe I overpaid some dollars, to me that won't matter but see the damage that NameJet is getting with this thread.
Their reputation is at stake, and that should be worth much more for an auction platform.
 
3
•••
I think one of the main issues that has lead to this is that NJ doesn't have a lot of automation going on in the back-end of the platform and a lot of the work they do with their sellers is based upon trust. When you submit domain names to be listed on the platform the only real requirement the company has is that you make sure you transfer any domain name that sells into Enom so that they can push it to the winner of the auction. I'm pretty sure NJ does not verify ownership of all the domain names sellers submit (I've accidentally submitted a domain that I did not own anymore) and this explains why a domain name can easily be listed under a seller account who does not own the domain name at that given time.

I honestly believe NJ takes the issue of shill bidding very seriously (there's nothing in it for the company to allow or turn a blind eye to such a practice - this thread show exactly why) but it does seem that their current back-end process has allowed for several loopholes that some sellers have taken advantage off.

I started out in this industry by building my portfolio with NJ buys and continued to spend a considerable amount of money at NJ over the years. I have also made a lot of money selling names to end-users that were NJ purchases. More recently I have also sold some inventory at NJ and they have been a sponsor of my blog, DNgeek.com - so obviously it is extremely disappointing to read all this about a company I hold in high regards and that is such an important part of our reseller market. I hope they will see this issue as an opportunity to clean up and further improve the platform.
 
3
•••
This is sickening. NameJet has reinstated all the public auctions of Oliver.
HKDN has bid again recently, despite all this. I guess his account isn't banned/suspended yet, or that was a bid just before the suspension.
See qne.net , an auction by Oliver.
I think NameJet has decided to sleep over the matter.
 
7
•••
Has NameJet came up with an answer yet? Couldn't go through every post (even though I want to).

Well, hoping they would come up with an answer (excuse) this year. :xf.rolleyes:
 
1
•••
  • The sidebar remains visible by scrolling at a speed relative to the page’s height.
Back