Trader Joe's filed a dispute with WIPO under the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP), but the domain name owner has said he registered the domain name as a financial trading site for the general public.
The sale of the untimely renewed domain name Dog.ai for $47,150 (roughly Rs. 340,000) earlier this month was void, as the auction winner apparently failed to pay. The domain is currently up for auction with a few days left; there are
The report is based on 145,100 aftermarket domain sales recorded by NameBio in 2023, totaling slightly over $139 million. At least from the NameBio data, it can be seen that the dollar volume of domain market transactions decreased by 21.2%
More exciting domain summits are coming up in 2024. Here are the dates and locations of upcoming domain summits in 2024 across the globe. Let's take a look at these important events.
According to overseas media, another word domain name Loft.ai has been successfully traded for $50,000 (about RMB 359,000), which was registered in September 2018, with the prefix Loft meaning "loft and small room". The domain name
Recently, two other highly anticipated domain name transactions have also attracted people's attention. The domain "Bet.bet" was sold for $600,000 (approximately 4.3 million RMB), while the numerical and word combination domain Bet789.com
Recent news reports indicate that Meta, Inc., the parent company of Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, has filed multiple UDRP cases in defence of its "Meta" trademark. Shortly after the company's domain name was rebranded,
The domain ranking for the past half-month has been released (February 5-18), with .ai domains once again grabbing attention, occupying 5 out of the top 10 spots. Among them, Sound.ai closed at $250,000, ranking first. Here's a compilation
As of the end of the fourth quarter of 2023, the total number of domain registrations for .com and .net top-level domains in the domain database was 172.7 million, a decrease of 1.2 million domain registrations from the third quarter,
In December last year, a third-party broker contacted the former owner of Sussex.com, who then conveyed his asking price to the unidentified buyer. Mr. Neil Agate, when interviewed by the Daily Mail, stated that the price was "fair," and