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The original thread is now deleted/edited by user @Daniel Capusan

https://www.namepros.com/threads/1079625/#post-6701015

but here goes:

User posted a thread seeking out the owner of the domain name Vege.us as they wanted to buy the domain, our brokerage team reached out to the user in the thread asking what their budget was to acquire the domain. They replied stating they were willing to purchase the domain for $1500. They were only willing to use sedo.com for sale.

Our brokerage team went to work to get that domain for the user.

We acquired the domain from a “Iuga Petru Ovidiu” using our PayPal acct “I will be filing a dispute”.

After acquiring the domain and updating the contact info, we reached back out to the buyer here on namepros, they now changed their tune, said “we will reach out to the food company to see if they are still interested in vege.us”

Our reply was “you agreed on a purchase price and method, as per forum rules you are bound to this agreement. The buyers response was “ you didn’t tell me you were the owner of the domain so I don’t need to buy it from you”

Scammers like this on namepros? Come on guys, I don’t really care about the $400 as I will get it back through credit protection but it’s just bad business!

WATCH OUT FOR THIS USER @Daniel Capusan
 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
USA dear BrandMart but i am angry because JudgeMind call me scammer & is not true
problem with that?
Problem? I don't have a problem. @JudgeMind will report this 'scam' to staff. They'll review and may as well ban you.

If you had agreed on a deal with certain price involved and he acquired the domain for you, you should honor your commitment. I am sure the staff will take a good look at this and do the right thing for our community.
 
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This is funny you sold blockchainbet.com on NameJet, and failed to fulfill the transaction.

Then you claimed it was stolen from your godaddy account, and failed to fulfill the transaction. I asked you if I should warn the community, you said no no no, you wanted to handle it internally. I contacted my godaddy rep, he had no info on it, I contacted the current owner, and they were very open in communicating, and said this was the first they heard of it, so I find it very ironic.

Funny you are so open now, about this .us when it comes back the other way to you.

Our brokerage team? Lol give me a break, your brokerage team never reached out to me when you failed to fulfill your transaction.
From convo with JudgeMind
"I just noticed I forgot to update my contact info. It should update shortly." JudgeMind, Today at 9:58 AM
"?!? about what?" me
"The contact info on domain was showing old Whois. I have updated.
You can call me if you need to
1-************** ( not make public phone number to respect privacy of JudgeMind)
I wish to use escrow.com for transaction"JudgeMind, Today at 10:01 AM
What i understand from here is Judge forgot to update contact info from USA ( still listed on SEDO under a USA member) to his Canadian but acquire from some one else (also contact that person and say is not the owner)...that is strange/confuse for me
 
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Now, I just saw something interesting :)
https://www.facebook.com/DNGTLD/friends

You'll see an interesting name in his friends list: Daniel Alina Capusan (Alina is a girl name, I assume she is Daniel's wife)

So, JudgeMind wrote he aquired the name from a "Iuga Petru Ovidiu" to sell it to Capusan. But Petru and Capusan are friends on Facebook :)

@Daniel Capusan ive opened a dispute with PayPal.
 
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For the $2000 or less it will cost me to hire a lawyer and sue this guy it would be worth every penny.. publicly I’m giving him the opportunity to come clean, refund my payment through PayPal, I will even transfer his domain back. Or... I will slander your name all over this thread and through the entire domain industry and you will be contacted by my lawyer.

Your choice @Daniel Capusan, I will not extend this offer more than once. If my money is refunded I will request this thread be deleted and will take no further action. Choose carefully!
 
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"Scammers like this on namepros? Come on guys, I don’t really care about the $400 as I will get it back through credit protection but it’s just bad business!"
Notice you made some change on initial post, please provide our convo here
Because with your own word say " forgot to change whois data bla bla"
You just wanted sell to me a domain what is not yours from start . just say here in this post that you "We acquired the domain from a “Iuga Petru Ovidiu” using our PayPal acct “I will be filing a dispute”." but in our convo say other thing
And notice is not first time when you make this kind of practice wwwweb say same thing, maybe to other people..so i don't know who is scammer me or you ?!
By the way where is this person here on Namepros? want to here i think all what have to say.
Facebook? a lot facebooks profiles are friends with me..
 
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Personally it's an old methods! :xf.grin: the idea is someone buy his domain, but he create a thread , something like he want to pay more, so when we pay that domain, boom! :xf.laugh:

#GOtcha



Btw if you don't mention the domain name, technically you not guilty! but since you mention the names, it is obviously Scam!
 
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PM sent to JudgeMind request answer
 
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So you've been living in the US since you were 3yo, but you write like you've learned english last week because you're pissed? Lol
 
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So you've been living in the US since you were 3yo, but you write like you've learned english last week because you're pissed? Lol
LOL another "dust in the wind" from a member
 
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Read the new PM JudgeMind
 
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Another user created an 'I want to buy xxxxx.com, can someone help me? thread' last week. I wondered if they were a genuine purchaser, plain crazy or baiting.

@Daniel Capusan : If you had no intention of buying this particular name, why come on here to post that you want to?

@JudgeMind, Why on earth would you pay for a 'brokered' name without getting payment from @Daniel Capusan first? I am not sure what your case would be to Paypal cos you bought a domain fair and square from someone.

I do think you were baited and hope you get the payment reversed but if you don't, hard way to learn, Bro!
 
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I open a thread if anyone know the owner of Vege.us here on Namepros (not mandatory to buy it)
& based of what you see on SEDO (owner is from USA) because we only via SEDO ( i explain that to JudgeMind) ...and recived few PM from some members that tell me the owner is thisMr.Iuga (they look on whois as we do) and tell to members is a mistake/probably a error in whois

Now that you have deleted the original thread, how do we know that your domain request was not a firm one?
 
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Everything on the internet must be treated with caution however good the deal looks.
I was going through dnjournal sales and saw something strange, a domain (my.tax) is listed as sold at $22,500 but when I checked it just for the sake on godaddy,the same name is available for $5000 at minimum offer. Whois pull shows the registrant as a Transfer Service-sedo. I have no experience in domain-ing and I maybe wrong in my assessments because I felt that the sales was just effected last week and the offering pricing is way too down below the purchasing price.
 
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Dear Daniel Capusan,

I don't see the need for knowing JudgeMind's real location, operating singly or with a team, or being a broker, first owner or last owner of a particular domain name as a great excuse to not purchase the domain from him.

It's clear simple. He did what any other domainer might do if they were in his place. He saw you interested in a particular domain name. He researched about it. Saw it being sold on another platform. Got an idea to make a little profit out of it. Both of you agreed on a payment amount. He might have contacted the original user, purchased the domain from him for a little less amount and tried to initiate the transaction which you both agreed upon.

He may or may not have pretended to be the original owner, but as long as he didn't steal or hacked the domain, I don't see any real reason for you not keeping your word. If you really wanted the domain, you would have gotten from him or previous owner anyhow.

Domaining is just like any other offline/online business and all business owners do lie a little bit to attract their clients. It's a common business tactic. One may say that they got a great offer from another end user to inflate the inbound/outbound inquiries, or something similar to keep their business going.

JudgeMind (or any other person on this earth) could be an American or a Canadian. They could be brokers, end users or resellers. They might have a team or might not have. But as long as they are legally buying/selling domains or any other legal stuff from you or to you, all other things shouldn't be a matter of concern for you.

I will give you a real-life incident which might help you understand what I am trying to convey exactly.

I went to a local cloth market and stopped at a store a while back. I needed a particular kind of designer dress which I described to the store owner. The store owner told that they had a dress that fits my requirements perfectly. He asked me to wait for sometime till his employees get it from their warehouse a block or two away. He called one of his employees and told something in his ear. His employee went out of the store and I could see his whereabouts because the store had see-through glasses all around.

At first, the guy went to a store beside, waited outside, a person came out, he told him something, the other person told him something and that employee moved on. Stopped at another store, talked to a person, then moved away. Did something at next 2-3 stores and finally, a person at the last store he went, spoke to him and came out with a few dresses that matched my requirements. He grabbed those dresses, thanked the store owner or employee (from what I figured out) and came back to the store.

He showed me all of those dresses. While the employee was showing me those dresses, the owner was boasting of how their shop was the only specialist in the city dealing with these kinds of dresses. How they get the cloth woven in a special mill that no other cloth store owners have access to. How they get designers from other cities and countries to add sequins, shimmer, stones and other stuff on their dresses. How their warehouse contains highly customized pieces of designer wears and blah blah.

I knew he was lying to my face, but I just didn't want to mess with him and I know these are commonly practiced business methodologies that are in vogue since forever. I pretended to go with his lies. I picked the dress that I liked the most. Asked for the price, he gave me a really escalated price. I kept bargaining. He kept boasting about his dresses and how my choice was unique and all. I wanted to move to the next store due to budget constraints, but I really liked the dress so I was firmly bargaining over and over. Finally, we both agreed on a particular price. I paid him and took my lovely loot back to my home.

So why did I purchased the dress from him if I knew all along that he was a plain liar?
1. He saved my time and energy. If not for him, I would have to stop at every store and return empty-handed.
2. Got a great discount. Since I chose to keep mum for his non-sensical talks, he thought I was a good client and allowed me to bargain my heart out. I can say this because few of my cousins got similar kinds of dresses elsewhere at 2-3 times more the prices.
3. I discovered a store that's going to give me value for money and even save my time. He got a customer that recommends his store to all her friends and family. It was a win-win situation for both of us.
4. I got exactly what I wanted, under my budget, while coolly seated inside an air-conditioned store.

But just not to make a fool of myself, I returned to the market a few days later, went to the other store that actually had that dress, again described what I wanted. That store's employee guided me to a mannequin that was wearing the same dress that I purchased. I asked for its price and the same old escalated plumpy amount was given. Tried to reason out and bargain, the store owner got pissed off and clearly expressed that his shop was a fixed-price one and they don't entertain any bargaining. I left the store and neither the owner nor the employees were keen to talk to me about selling out that dress to me.

So here are the lessons I learned that day:
1. The business owners should have a great convincing power. if your attitude isn't great, nobody will care to get anything from you even if you are distributing things for FREE.
2. A little lie is always a great backbone to make business prosperous. Although I don't endorse lying.
3. Resellers do help each other to clear out each other's inventories. They may sell things to other resellers at cost-to cost or for a loss, but they will never let their end users know this because this might be bad for their business.
4. Word of mouth, real-life ratings and experiences are the most powerful form of advertising and marketing.
5. Work on what client wants and not on whatever you like to sell.

I am not trying to accuse anyone or anybody here nor trying to take up sides, but if you really want something, you get it in any way possible (legal of course). So as long as JudgeMind, hasn't stolen or hacked the domain name nor forcefully or deceitfully acquired the domain from the previous owner, and tried to complete the transaction in a timely manner, nothing else should be on your mind.

And everybody knows that sometimes, the previous owners forget to remove domains from the various auction houses they previously submitted to sell.

Just my two cents.

Have a great day, peeps :)
 
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I don't see any problem here honestly. User Judgemind was too greedy to ignore the million red signs that had to come up with buying random 10 day old .US domain from a Romanian and trying to arbitrage it. Even if the deal was legit you had to buy this domain thus bearing the risk of owning the asset and having the connecting deal fall through.

Own up and suck up the loss (xxx$ lessons are cheap), learn something about yourself and warn others about the scam (which you rightly did).

The other party here has to understand that this is probably against the ethics or rules of this community and face the actions there off.
 
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I don't see any problem here honestly. User Judgemind was too greedy to ignore the million red signs that had to come up with buying random 10 day old .US domain from a Romanian and trying to arbitrage it. Even if the deal was legit you had to buy this domain thus bearing the risk of owning the asset and having the connecting deal fall through.

Own up and suck up the loss (xxx$ lessons are cheap), learn something about yourself and warn others about the scam (which you rightly did).

The other party here has to understand that this is probably against the ethics or rules of this community and face the actions there off.
I open a convo with Judge we try to figure out how to recive money $400 because now is a open case in Paypal under Paypal investigation
& by the way for all members & i quote from convo with Judge "So must understand this & must tell to community/apologize that implicate name of Daniel Capusan & his family in your problem & Daniel is 100% innocent" but this must be confirmed also by Judge after will recive the money and go one in convo "You can refer only to me & if you want to expose me as a scammer your choice ( Iuga Petru Ovidiu) " :xf.wink: now members of Namepros are happy?..i will open a post soon to explain all this ..in my name
 
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Dear Daniel Capusan,

I don't see the need for knowing JudgeMind's real location, operating singly or with a team, or being a broker, first owner or last owner of a particular domain name as a great excuse to not purchase the domain from him.

It's clear simple. He did what any other domainer might do if they were in his place. He saw you interested in a particular domain name. He researched about it. Saw it being sold on another platform. Got an idea to make a little profit out of it. Both of you agreed on a payment amount. He might have contacted the original user, purchased the domain from him for a little less amount and tried to initiate the transaction which you both agreed upon.

He may or may not have pretended to be the original owner, but as long as he didn't steal or hacked the domain, I don't see any real reason for you not keeping your word. If you really wanted the domain, you would have gotten from him or previous owner anyhow.

Domaining is just like any other offline/online business and all business owners do lie a little bit to attract their clients. It's a common business tactic. One may say that they got a great offer from another end user to inflate the inbound/outbound inquiries, or something similar to keep their business going.

JudgeMind (or any other person on this earth) could be an American or a Canadian. They could be brokers, end users or resellers. They might have a team or might not have. But as long as they are legally buying/selling domains or any other legal stuff from you or to you, all other things shouldn't be a matter of concern for you.

I will give you a real-life incident which might help you understand what I am trying to convey exactly.

I went to a local cloth market and stopped at a store a while back. I needed a particular kind of designer dress which I described to the store owner. The store owner told that they had a dress that fits my requirements perfectly. He asked me to wait for sometime till his employees get it from their warehouse a block or two away. He called one of his employees and told something in his ear. His employee went out of the store and I could see his whereabouts because the store had see-through glasses all around.

At first, the guy went to a store beside, waited outside, a person came out, he told him something, the other person told him something and that employee moved on. Stopped at another store, talked to a person, then moved away. Did something at next 2-3 stores and finally, a person at the last store he went, spoke to him and came out with a few dresses that matched my requirements. He grabbed those dresses, thanked the store owner or employee (from what I figured out) and came back to the store.

He showed me all of those dresses. While the employee was showing me those dresses, the owner was boasting of how their shop was the only specialist in the city dealing with these kinds of dresses. How they get the cloth woven in a special mill that no other cloth store owners have access to. How they get designers from other cities and countries to add sequins, shimmer, stones and other stuff on their dresses. How their warehouse contains highly customized pieces of designer wears and blah blah.

I knew he was lying to my face, but I just didn't want to mess with him and I know these are commonly practiced business methodologies that are in vogue since forever. I pretended to go with his lies. I picked the dress that I liked the most. Asked for the price, he gave me a really escalated price. I kept bargaining. He kept boasting about his dresses and how my choice was unique and all. I wanted to move to the next store due to budget constraints, but I really liked the dress so I was firmly bargaining over and over. Finally, we both agreed on a particular price. I paid him and took my lovely loot back to my home.

So why did I purchased the dress from him if I knew all along that he was a plain liar?
1. He saved my time and energy. If not for him, I would have to stop at every store and return empty-handed.
2. Got a great discount. Since I chose to keep mum for his non-sensical talks, he thought I was a good client and allowed me to bargain my heart out. I can say this because few of my cousins got similar kinds of dresses elsewhere at 2-3 times more the prices.
3. I discovered a store that's going to give me value for money and even save my time. He got a customer that recommends his store to all her friends and family. It was a win-win situation for both of us.
4. I got exactly what I wanted, under my budget, while coolly seated inside an air-conditioned store.

But just not to make a fool of myself, I returned to the market a few days later, went to the other store that actually had that dress, again described what I wanted. That store's employee guided me to a mannequin that was wearing the same dress that I purchased. I asked for its price and the same old escalated plumpy amount was given. Tried to reason out and bargain, the store owner got pissed off and clearly expressed that his shop was a fixed-price one and they don't entertain any bargaining. I left the store and neither the owner nor the employees were keen to talk to me about selling out that dress to me.

So here are the lessons I learned that day:
1. The business owners should have a great convincing power. if your attitude isn't great, nobody will care to get anything from you even if you are distributing things for FREE.
2. A little lie is always a great backbone to make business prosperous. Although I don't endorse lying.
3. Resellers do help each other to clear out each other's inventories. They may sell things to other resellers at cost-to cost or for a loss, but they will never let their end users know this because this might be bad for their business.
4. Word of mouth, real-life ratings and experiences are the most powerful form of advertising and marketing.
5. Work on what client wants and not on whatever you like to sell.

I am not trying to accuse anyone or anybody here nor trying to take up sides, but if you really want something, you get it in any way possible (legal of course). So as long as JudgeMind, hasn't stolen or hacked the domain name nor forcefully or deceitfully acquired the domain from the previous owner, and tried to complete the transaction in a timely manner, nothing else should be on your mind.

And everybody knows that sometimes, the previous owners forget to remove domains from the various auction houses they previously submitted to sell.

Just my two cents.

Have a great day, peeps :)

We have a winner of pulizer price 2018
A domain is not a dress . You can't pretend you are the owner a domain when you are not but try to sell/accept offer from a buyer...it's called scam or unethical ( sweet version)
 
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Let's cut to the chase:

"They replied stating they were willing to purchase the domain for $1500."

If that occurred, it's a binding agreement.

The mods can undelete the vege.us request thread even after it was edited.
 
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@Daniel Capusan You asked for a specific domain and judgemind got it for you.

You agreed on a price,
Why not complete the transaction?
 
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@Daniel Capusan You asked for a specific domain and judgemind got it for you.

You agreed on a price,
Why not complete the transaction?
not agree on the price title of first convo is "
"Are you the owner of Vege.us?"
& say in message "We pay max. $1500
in profile page say you are from Canada"
Judge response after 24H was:
"Hi Daniel,
I’ll accept $1500 for the domain vege.us.
Did you wish to pay through escrow or are you comfortable with PayPal?" and when answer still was not the owner of Vege only after aprox half hour contact me via email

Enough now i will open a new post in my name . name of Daniel C. will not more use is 100% innocent
 
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Let's cut to the chase:

"They replied stating they were willing to purchase the domain for $1500."

If that occurred, it's a binding agreement.

The mods can undelete the vege.us request thread even after it was edited.

In your ideal world that might be it. And maybe vaguely in U.S and some Western countries laws.

But in the real trading world, this is not the case. Nobody gives a crap what is right or wrong and deals take different directions quickly and if that money is not in your account the deal is not done. This might not be what is acceptable in your tribe's culture but this is a global market place, you have to be aware of it and we're trading mostly semi-anonymously under usernames and completing deals with only e-mails or forum messages.

And let's be real here this threatening with law and lawyers over few hundred dollar deals is ridiculous, nobody is scared. Start fuc'king owning shit when you take risks and they don't turn out the way you wanted or somebody "lied". Come on...

If he's actions break the rules of this community and forum then he faces an action.
 
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And let's be real here this threatening with law and lawyers over few hundred dollar deals is ridiculous, nobody is scared. Start fuc'king owning sh*t when you take risks and they don't turn out the way you wanted or somebody "lied". Come on...

If he's actions break the rules of this community and forum then he faces an action.

Get real. In Florida, and other states, even an oral agreement can be used in litigation. The amount is irrelevant, you can go to a small claims court for up to $5,000 dollars. There are ways to enforce basic laws of trade. Nobody wants to be scammed, and that's the entire purpose of this thread: to warn others, and there's substantial evidence that the two Romanians know each other.

I've seen people getting banned on NPs for smaller infractions.
 
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I SAY ABOVE
Enough now i will open a new post in my name . name of Daniel C. will not more use is 100% innocent
ce mama naibii voi chiar nu pricepeti? vorbesc turceste :P
 
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