A recent dispute involving a rapper and domain name ownership has been ruled a "reverse domain hijacking" case by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) based on the UDRP, drawing industry attention.
Recently, a tech-focused .io domain, Neptune.io, changed hands for $45,000. The word "Neptune" is often used in technology, data, and big data industries to represent brand imagery such as "depth," "exploration," or "futuristic technology."
Recently, a domain investor publicly announced on the X platform that they successfully sold Velocity.io for $100,000. This domain ranks 15th among the highest-priced .io domain transactions in history.
On November 5th, Bitfire Technology, a Hong Kong-listed fintech company, made a major announcement at the Hong Kong Fintech Week series of events, revealing the global strategic layout of its international business brand "Bitfire"!
Domain investor Sohrab revealed on the X platform that he successfully sold his number-based domain name 44.ai for $23,000. He also joked in the post, "I guess I set a new record for Number/Number.ai."
Recently, the domain investment world received a major announcement: the generic domain Skins.com was sold for $1,459,450 (approximately over ten million RMB), becoming the fifth largest publicly disclosed domain transaction this year.
The ENS domain Chain.eth, highly valuable in the Web3 space, sold for 60 ETH (approximately $186,000). Even more noteworthy is that the buyer is the team from Chain.com, a well-known blockchain infrastructure company.
Recently, well-known domain investor Andy Booth revealed on the X platform that he was granted permission by a friend to publicly disclose two transaction records: Conversive.ai and CEI.ai were both successfully sold for $50,000 each.