Maybe someone will come along from that side of life to buy the name from you?
It only works for the US market, as American's are prudes and often hide what they really want to say, plus the added burden of PC, acceptance, tolerance, which muddies and complicates life enormously.
Thus the word "whore" became "ho", (and also 304 - SMH), plus many Americans use that word instead of slut, but these words are not the same and they mean different things.
I see your post about how you see this name being used;
https://www.namepros.com/threads/truho-com-a-strong-modern-name-for-an-ai-app-service.1367917/
The problem with your thinking is that I don't think many people will make the connection between true and honesty from your domain, never mind make the large leap to financial honesty.
This illustrates one of the problems with people creating domains in isolation (which we all are in). We are alone in our name creation process and some people can easily convince themselves of their idea for a name, boosted by their ego, which most people have and so people think that because they are good/great/superb/fantastic, so are their ideas. We see this all the time on this forum, especially from newcomers, who create elaborate, decorative flamboyant posts, extolling the many virtues of a name they have created, with ridiculous and laughable bullet points, which they think will somehow make their terrible name appear attractive.
A good/great name needs no promotion, no selling, no song and dance and no attention.
But its just not so for a large number of people, ergo why great things are only occurring to the few and not to the many. Yes, sometimes, a person who hasn't had many good ideas or none at all before, suddenly comes up with one and yes, they can make something of it. If great ideas were widespread, we would see it everywhere and we just don't.
This is well understood in society and by those who study such things. But we don't need to study people who are very successful in their field so see that relative to the population, they are in the 1-2% of the population, or less. This is why many people who are big fans of and pursue successful people in all walks of life - movie stars, music bands, comedians, business tycoons, politicians, scientists, "personalities", and others. And so people pursue such successful people because they want to be in that "successful air" that such people have, but mostly its because they hope that, somehow, someway, some of the "magic" that these people have will rub off onto them, but they often won't realize that this is why they pursue them. This is why we have often seen fans of famous singers and musicians want to touch that person on stage.
There are downsides to pursuing such people and wanting what they have, not least of which is the belief that your life isn't as good without what they have, or that living without their "magic" effect on you is not good enough, or not good at all. This can lead to a lot worse things.