The premium English domain name MyForce.com recently sold for $90,000 under a 60-month lease-purchase agreement with an initial monthly payment of $1,000 that increases gradually over time.
A World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) panel recently dismissed a dispute involving the three-letter domain name SBK.com, finding that the complainant, Smarkets Limited, had engaged in "reverse domain name hijacking."
Zhang.com, the domain name representing the Chinese surname "Zhang," sold for $63,555 at a GoDaddy auction. Registered in 1997, the domain is one of the earliest .com domains and was put up for public auction after its expiration date.
The domain name "Stock.ai" was successfully sold through DN.com, a global premium domain trading platform. This premium domain name combines the cutting-edge concepts of "stock" and "artificial intelligence (.ai)."
The English domain name Shiatsu.com sold for $31,000. "Shiatsu" is a transliteration of the Japanese word "shiatsu," a globally used term for a traditional healing method involving acupressure using the thumbs and palms.
The UDRP panel has denied PAQT.com BV’s complaint over PAQT.ai, ruling the registrant had legitimate plans for the domain and no evidence of bad faith was found.
The concise yet highly brandable domain name yes.fi was successfully sold for US$42,350, attracting widespread attention from the domain name investment community.
The two-letter domain name ZH.com recently sold for a whopping $1 million. Registered in 1994, it is one of only 676 two-letter .com domains in the world, making it extremely rare and valuable.
According to domain name investor Aaron, the domain name Ai.now was recently sold successfully for US$25,000, just six months after it was registered and purchased for US$15,525 in January this year.
WIPO has issued an arbitration decision in a cybersquatting dispute, finding that a complaint filed by French environmental consulting firm Blunomy Advisory regarding the domain name blunomy.com constituted “reverse domain hijacking.”