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I am seeing that quite a few of my domain names (that are only listed at Afternic) are for sale at GNAME for higher prices. WTF? Anyone know what is going on. Very shady.


GNAME happens to be an Afternic Partner, which could be why.I am seeing that quite a few of my domain names (that are only listed at Afternic) are for sale at GNAME for higher prices. WTF? Anyone know what is going on. Very shady.
Yeah. The 30% commission figure represents a worstโcase scenario, effectively losing nearly a third of your revenue to Afternic. This typically happens when Afternic Boost is enabled (it's enabled by default) and the GoDaddy network nameservers are not being used for the landers.Afternic commission: 30%
What do they mean? Isn't it just expected behavior?I talked to my Afternic rep about this, and he said they are aware of the situation and working on it. FWIW.
That's what I thought as well.What do they mean? Isn't it just expected behavior?
It's apparently against the terms of service for a partner to price higher. I'm going to clarify this though. My rep said, "We are aware and I believe the team that handles partner sites is looking into it."What do they mean? Isn't it just expected behavior?
I'll be watching this case closely, as it may represent a dramatic shift from Afternic's established approach.It's apparently against the terms of service for a partner to price higher. I'm going to clarify this though. My rep said, "We are aware and I believe the team that handles partner sites is looking into it."
Likewise... seems the opposite of what they used to allow and what's been published about it.I'll be watching this case closely, as it may represent a dramatic shift from Afternic's established approach.
Do keep us informed.
I'm seeing an additional 20% markup above the Afternic BIN price.For those with their names listed at Afternic, see if any of your names are also listed at gname at higher prices.
I'm seeing an additional 20% markup above the Afternic BIN price.
I checked about a 10 registrars and of them I see that Name.com and Namesilo.com are adding 20%.Check netsoil, namesilo, all the partners.
Prolly find all kinds different pricing
Show attachment 282821
Ya, that's how it's been for a while.My rep just got back to me again and apologized that he misinformed me. It is NOT against the terms of service to markup prices.
I think this policy stinks, for the reason I said above.
As examples my $2,999, $4,999, $9,999 prices become $3,598.80, $5,998.80, and 11,998.80. These are much less appealing prices. And most all buyers are NOT going think "gee, I wonder if it's selling for less at another registrar?" If they don't like the price, they will just move on.
And if it sells at the higher price, I don't get any of that extra. It is pocketed by the registrar.
Afternic specifically allows reseller partners to increase prices upon approvalGNAME happens to be an Afternic Partner, which could be why.
https://help.afternic.com/s/article/Afternic-Partners
A lot of Afternic partners have an additional markup, and that's shady indeed. Especially given that Afternic TOS prohibits Sellers from listing domains at different prices across platforms.

