Recently, Telepathy, the top-level domain portfolio holding company of investor Nat Cohen, announced the successful sale of the highly coveted two-letter top-level domain name NS.com, which has once again sparked a lot of interest and buzz
A few months ago, a foreign media outlet reported that OpenAI had legally acquired the domain name ChatGPT.com. the domain name used by ChatGPT when it appeared in late 2022 was chat.openai.com.Despite ending up in legal limbo, ChatGPT.com
According to foreign media, recently, Support Shepherd, a well-known foreign recruitment platform, abandoned its original matching domain name SupportShepherd.com and successfully acquired Somewhere.com for $400,000 (about RMB 2.88 million)
In a recent UDRP case for the SigFi.ai domain name, the Chinese Respondent was shocked by the Complainant's claims and stated that it is just a fan of the ".ai" domain name.The Complainant, Nvest, Inc. (d/b/a SigFig), claims to have been
Just yesterday, Elon Musk announced on Twitter (X) that all of the site's core systems are now under the single letter domain name "X.com". Elon Musk announced on Twitter (X) that all of the site's core systems are now under the one-letter
If you are looking for newly deleted three letter .com domain names, keep an eye on RZT.com.
The world's shortest known registered three letter .com has expired, been discarded and is now in a DropCatch auction with a price of $16,001 for
Michael Santiago (Michael Santiago) published a compelling story about how domain names allowed him to personally amass a 7-figure income and ultimately net an 8-figure income for his business partners after selling his business to
After George Kirikos reported on his FreeSpeech.com blog last week that Gold.com sold for an eye-popping $8,515,000 in March, there's no doubt which domain name will make it onto our latest bi-weekly sales chart.
Neurocog Pty Ltd, an Australian clinical psychology clinic, has filed a UDRP against the domain name Neurocog.com. The company has registered the trademark "Neurocog" in both Australia and the United States. According to the WIPO panelists,
There are a large number of misspelled domain names on the Internet, both in pinyin and English. This phenomenon is sometimes jokingly referred to as "bumper stickers", and other times it is seen as a pure spelling error. Today,