Ive been looking at their site, the domains are amazing. How do they ever pick up domains like that? How do they grab them the seccond they're avalible again.


Devil_Dog said:They have an exclusive partnership with netsol.
Netsol is basically the 1st registrar on the block so that = prime domains from back in the 90's that are expiring.
Yep and probably about another 100 registers including register.com which I think is another oldey ?Devil_Dog said:They have an exclusive partnership with netsol.
Netsol is basically the 1st registrar on the block so that = prime domains from back in the 90's that are expiring.
cvxdes said:Ive been looking at their site, the domains are amazing. How do they ever pick up domains like that? How do they grab them the seccond they're avalible again.
It will be interesting if this does happen, I read somewhere that the registrars get the largest percentage of the sale, not sure how true this is but I would imagine Snapnames is and will continue to make an absolute fortune.Ben42 said:I don't see how this is even legal. I'm sure they are paying quite a bit for that "Partnership". They are in essence just selling registrations to the highest bidder. In this least it's unethical.
I believe there will be a big class action lawsuit within the next 5 years or so.
I don't see how it's illegal. It's their name(the registrars) and they can do whatever they want with it, basically.Ben42 said:I don't see how this is even legal. I'm sure they are paying quite a bit for that "Partnership". They are in essence just selling registrations to the highest bidder. In this least it's unethical.
I believe there will be a big class action lawsuit within the next 5 years or so.
Actually it is the registrant name, not the registrar..Devil_Dog said:I don't see how it's illegal. It's their name(the registrars) and they can do whatever they want with it, basically.
As long as there's a market for it, it'll be around.
I am not sure if the registrars actually do own the domains, I thought they just operate on the behalf of the operaters of the TLD ?Devil_Dog said:I don't see how it's illegal. It's their name(the registrars) and they can do whatever they want with it, basically.
So if you let a name expire, ie not pay for it, you'd still consider it yours?aldwin said:Actually it is the registrant name, not the registrar..
Devil_Dog said:I don't see how it's illegal. It's their name(the registrars) and they can do whatever they want with it, basically.
As long as there's a market for it, it'll be around.
Netsol's job is to distribute names?Ben42 said:Thats like saying the mint can print money and sell it on the side for whatever they want. Their job is to distribute, not grab valuable names as they expire and sell them on the side.
Just because it's not them actually selling the names is a nice little loophole. I'd be interested to know how much netsol is making on the deal. Someone like DNJournal REALLY needs to break this story.
Thus the creation of drop auctions.Ben42 said:because there isn't enough money in it by itself.
Ben42 said:A registrar's job is to register names for people.
You have a point there but I am sure snap and verisign have some type of legal mumbo-jumbo agreement with a kajillion never heard of words and terms stating that snap has the legal authority to auction these high-prized names off.gazzip said:This is off the Icaan Registrar Accreditation agreement:
3.7.9 Registrar shall abide by any ICANN adopted specifications or policies prohibiting or restricting warehousing of or speculation in domain names by registrars.
The bit that bothers me is I just tried to get a dropping name at snapnames - it did not drop but was reg'd for another year by the registrar concerned :td: - Now if they new I was the only person who had placed a backorder on that name for $60 but the think it is worth more than that then did they choose to keep it and possibly auction it off again at a later date ?
that sucks if that is how they are operating !
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