Domain Registrar Discounts
Name.com and GoDaddy.com are our favorite registrars. There’s no one IOHO, who can match their features and prices. Here, we will discuss about their new facilities that will be of interest to domain portfolio holders.
Name.com has recently started the Name.com Investors Club. Customers who have registered more than 25 domains with them are eligible. You get higher rates of discount than what are advertised for the general public on their Twitter and Facebook pages. And, their sweetest deal at the moment is $11.99 .IN renewal.
Read more about the Name.com investor club and sign-up here (this is not an affiliate link
).
GoDaddy Affiliates frequently get killer deals. Earlier we needed to lick CJ.com’s bottom and still they would kick on our face (God! I hate CJ and similar affiliate networks), but now all GoDaddy customers are automatically eligible to be a direct affiliate.
The GoDaddy automatic / direct affiliate system (this is an affiliate link
) was started by them just a few months back. You get inside info about discounts up to 30% and frequent promotion code emails, like the one we got today for 20% off anything valid only today. We also had one for 25% off everything valid for the whole of last week. No need to search for coupons or promo codes all over the Internet. BTW, are you one of the folks who hate GoDaddy upsells? You are losing out on great, surprise deals that they spring up on you, just for a few clicks more!
Categories: General Tags: affiliate, code, coupon, discount, godaddy.com, investor club, name.com, promotion, registrar
Nominative Use of Trademark Names
July 14, 2010. Two legal events will bring some relief to owners of domain names having trademark name as part of domain name or those that use trademark names as keywords in ads. Of course, the domain should satisfy the fair nominative use clause.
A Canadian court recently held that advertising campaigns on keywords that are trademark names, do not infringe on trademark rights. Read more about this legal brief on trademark names at Sedo.
In another case, a US Federal Court rules against Toyota in Buy-A-Lexus.com & BuyorLeaseLexus.com. In brief, it says when the alleged domain owner is obviously promoting the trade mark itself and not competing with it, then it is not bad faith. Read more details about Toyota losing the domain case at TheDomains.com.
Categories: General Tags: legal, nominative use, trademark
Free Domain Auctions
UPDATE: October 28, 2010. We have come to know that Bido.com has re-launched as of date.
UPDATE: May 05, 2010. This post has partly become irrelevant, because Bido.com ceased operations as of date.
April 05, 2010. Every domainer has tried to submit their domain(s) at some or other domain auction portal and faced rejection. Most places where you won’t face rejection are places that charge upfront to list your name. And almost all of these sites try to tell you that your domain is crap unless it is a one word dictionary term and has type-in traffic of a few thousands per day.
If we had that kind of domain why would we want to sell it unless we were bankrupt. Do they think that we can’t develop a business out of such a domain? But when you see their own lists you can see what real crap is. They are looking for premium names to offload their own crap mixed in with good names.
Enter BIDO! Bido domain name auctions have changed the face of domain selling with an ingenious method of free listing along with vote for profit where Bido users vote on names to go for auction. And, in the process, they gain a percentage of Bido profit, when the name they voted sells. It’s the market that decides whether a domain is crappy or not. But sometimes many users may not notice a domain to vote or their votes may get exhausted. For such cases they have the acceleration method. You buy credit and move your domain to the auction without any votes. If you find that you wanted to vote for a name which could bid real high and you stand to gain by voting for it, and your votes were exhausted, then you can use the credit to change to votes and then vote for profit on Bido.
Bido takes commission only when your name sells. There is no upfront charge to list. Your domain name can get voted up for auction or you could use paid credit to accelerate it to auction. Bido’s a favorite online hangout for us nowadays.
Categories: General Tags: bido, free domain auction, vote for profit


