- Impact
- 139
I do not consider LLL.com "risk free" bets anymore. While LLL.coms used to be a great way to flip a domain and make a pretty penny, that is increasingly no longer the case due to the increased risk. Now, there is greater risk putting large sums of money into a domain that could quite easily be taken from you in a UDRP. While 3L domains used to be sacred (e.g. assuming the registrant wasn't stupid, no one would be able to take the domain from him/her in a UDRP process). However, the sad fact is that WIPO and NAF have increasingly been willing to allow 3L domains to be taken away from the registrant.
This being said, anytime you have an asking price >$1,300 for a domain that could be subject to a UDRP, you are running a real risk of losing your domain. And yes, just about any LLL domain could be subject to a UDRP (due to the fact lots of businesses have three letter acronyms).
Put simply, why pay $8k+ for a LLL.com (or ~$1k for a LLL.net) right now when:
(1) the revenue/traffic on the domains are generally poor;
(2) any end user could spend $1,300 plus some attorneys fees and possibly take the domain from you in an UDRP; and
(3) the amount of domainers able/willing to purchase the domain back from you is a relatively small amount of people.
Better bets in the LLL marketspace are .orgs, .us, .biz, .info, and .mobis. Because these LLL domains are lower priced, even if you are faced with a person threatening a UDRP, it will be cheaper for the person to buy the domain from you than go to UDRP (and you, as the seller, will still be able to make a return selling the domain).
In other words, if you spend $150 on a LLL domain and someone threatens a UDRP, you can offer to sell the domain for anything under ~$1,500 and the person threatening the action probably will just buy the domain from you.
NOTE: Nothing in this post is meant to be supportive of cybersquatting or using domains to infringe on a third party's intelluctual property.
This being said, anytime you have an asking price >$1,300 for a domain that could be subject to a UDRP, you are running a real risk of losing your domain. And yes, just about any LLL domain could be subject to a UDRP (due to the fact lots of businesses have three letter acronyms).
Put simply, why pay $8k+ for a LLL.com (or ~$1k for a LLL.net) right now when:
(1) the revenue/traffic on the domains are generally poor;
(2) any end user could spend $1,300 plus some attorneys fees and possibly take the domain from you in an UDRP; and
(3) the amount of domainers able/willing to purchase the domain back from you is a relatively small amount of people.
Better bets in the LLL marketspace are .orgs, .us, .biz, .info, and .mobis. Because these LLL domains are lower priced, even if you are faced with a person threatening a UDRP, it will be cheaper for the person to buy the domain from you than go to UDRP (and you, as the seller, will still be able to make a return selling the domain).
In other words, if you spend $150 on a LLL domain and someone threatens a UDRP, you can offer to sell the domain for anything under ~$1,500 and the person threatening the action probably will just buy the domain from you.
NOTE: Nothing in this post is meant to be supportive of cybersquatting or using domains to infringe on a third party's intelluctual property.