No. I'm surprised the auction site even allows this.I recently came across a person selling domains for 3 times their hand reg value on an auction site that were still available to hand register. Do you feel this is an acceptable and ethical business practice?
Do you wonder how many more actual sellers, that have actually registered their domains, would be successful if such listings were prohibited? And, if those frontrunning sellers, trying to pawn off unregistered domains, were permanently banned from the auction site?That type of listing problem is, might be the seller will fail to deliver the domain when someone purchased it. The more failure auctions common will make the end user confuse to buy at that marketplace. And it will make bad situation to all domainers selling there too..
I don't know the numbers. But just 3 failed auction is enough to create a buzz that the auction site has a problem..Do you wonder how many more actual sellers, that have actually registered their domains, would be successful if such listings were prohibited? And, if those frontrunning sellers, trying to pawn off unregistered domains, were permanently banned from the auction site?
Is there any domain verifcation system on the site? One wonders if that is the underlying problem.I don't know the numbers. But just 3 failed auction is enough to create a buzz that the auction site has a problem..
From what the original poster indicated, perhaps they could start by checking the registry first? Simple screen for selling domains that aren't owned?Sounds like ebay to me, how would they verify every listing anyways if i am wrong, or even if I am right