The domain name, which was supposed to be transferred smoothly due to corporate bankruptcy, became deadlocked during the transaction and was ultimately decided through the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP).
Recently, the domain name C1.ai was sold for $65,000. According to public records, C1.ai was sold for $910 on January 6, 2020. In just five years, its price has increased by 7043%.
According to the latest .com domain name registration data for December 2024 released by ICANN and Verisign, the number of new registrations at GoDaddy, the world's largest domain name registrar, fell below 600,000 for the first time.
The recent UDRP case involving the LIBBS.com domain name attracted attention not only because of the outcome, but also because of the registrant’s unusual defense: citing DeepSeek as evidence of non-infringement.
The Virtuoso.ai domain recently sold for $70,000, joining the list of high-value .ai domain sales in 2025. This highlights investors’ continued confidence in premium .ai domains associated with strong brand keywords.
Recently, the controversy surrounding the existence of .su has come to a temporary end: .su will not be forced to retire just because the Soviet Union no longer exists.
On April 16, cryptocurrency trading platform OKX announced its official entry into the U.S. market. On the same day, OKX also completed the acquisition of the U.S. country domain name OKX.us.
Following Samoa’s .WS, Armenia’s national domain name .AM also completed on-chain mirroring, becoming the world’s second ccTLD to achieve Web2-Web3 integration.
OpenAI is at it again. According to Bloomberg, the AI giant is in talks to acquire AI programming startup Windsurf for about $3 billion. Less than a year ago, the company was valued at $1.25 billion.
Google recently announced that it will gradually stop using local Google websites in the form of country code top-level domains (ccTLDs) around the world and redirect them to google.com. This change will take effect in the next few months.