EliasDom
Established Member
- Impact
- 17
Hey everyone,
There has been a lot of talk lately about this AI explosion. While many people in graphic design and software careers are genuinely worried about being automated away, it feels like domaining is in a much safer spot.
In my view, this field is one of the few that remains relatively safe from the AI disruption. It is impossible to ask an AI to generate a premium 1-word .com or a legacy liquid asset because these are finite. It is digital real estate, not just digital content.
But here is the reality check. The future of AI is still a black box. It is hard to know how people will interact with the web 5 or 10 years from now. If AI agents start doing all the browsing, will the traditional URL bar still hold the same power? It is that unknown factor that makes me wonder if the industry might face some surprises that are impossible to imagine yet.
That said, AI actually seems like a massive breath of fresh air for domainers if they adapt. Think about how it is all coming together: thousands of new AI startups are launching every month needing brandable identities, search intent is shifting toward new high-value keywords, and even the general workflow in research and outbound has never been faster.
If domainers are sticking to the 2010 playbook, yeah, they might be in trouble. But if they treat AI as a steroid for a portfolio rather than a threat, it feels like the start of a very exciting era.
I am curious to hear the general take on this. Is the digital land bubble genuinely safe, or is there a scenario where AI makes the traditional domain name obsolete?
There has been a lot of talk lately about this AI explosion. While many people in graphic design and software careers are genuinely worried about being automated away, it feels like domaining is in a much safer spot.
In my view, this field is one of the few that remains relatively safe from the AI disruption. It is impossible to ask an AI to generate a premium 1-word .com or a legacy liquid asset because these are finite. It is digital real estate, not just digital content.
But here is the reality check. The future of AI is still a black box. It is hard to know how people will interact with the web 5 or 10 years from now. If AI agents start doing all the browsing, will the traditional URL bar still hold the same power? It is that unknown factor that makes me wonder if the industry might face some surprises that are impossible to imagine yet.
That said, AI actually seems like a massive breath of fresh air for domainers if they adapt. Think about how it is all coming together: thousands of new AI startups are launching every month needing brandable identities, search intent is shifting toward new high-value keywords, and even the general workflow in research and outbound has never been faster.
If domainers are sticking to the 2010 playbook, yeah, they might be in trouble. But if they treat AI as a steroid for a portfolio rather than a threat, it feels like the start of a very exciting era.
I am curious to hear the general take on this. Is the digital land bubble genuinely safe, or is there a scenario where AI makes the traditional domain name obsolete?









