Joined July 2022
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Sold my first domain on @spaceship, and I’m getting 95% of the funds! Selling domains finally feels great again. Huge thanks to @NamecheapCEO for disrupting the industry! 🚀 🚫 Sell a DN on GoDaddy with their lander... → GD takes 15–20% from you. 🚫 Sell a DN on GoDaddy without their lander... → GD takes 25–30% from you. ✅ Sell a DN on a Spaceship lander... → GD takes 0%, and Spaceship only 5%. No need to overthink it — simple math.
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What a great day! 🇺🇸🇮🇱 Rather than running to the shelters, I enjoyed watching these spectacular events because life is about being present in the moment. This is history in the making, and I feel part of it. The demon Ayatollah was exterminated. This is what I recorded today...
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Hey @Pepsi, hurry up and submit your offer for this gem before someone else does! The best part: it’s an Atom™ verified domain, and you’ll get a complimentary logo design. Since the classic red-white-blue from WWII could use a modern update, I suggest a neon pink electric blue.
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Not my domain 😂
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🌿 Me after 2 puffs of weed...
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Jack Domainer ⚡ retweeted
Meet The Domainers (Two Brothers) Who Created A Successful Domain Network—Now Worth Over $20 Million—After Struggling As Professional Musicians... No matter the metric you use, you can't list Top 5 domainers in the world without mentioning them. More Info about them below...
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Jack Domainer ⚡ retweeted
Meet The No.1 Domain Broker In The World Who Brokered X•com To The Richest Man In The World, Elon Musk... For 7 consecutive years, no domain broker has sold more premium domains than him, as reported & awarded by Escrow. You really need to open this thread to know more about him...
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Hey @NameBio how many paid subscribers do you have? 👀 Since you’re one of the industry’s top data wizards, I’ll speak your language and share my own estimate... 🗣️ In a 2020 interview, Michael Sumner (founder of NameBio) said: “Around 1/3 of the heaviest users have subscribed, and hundreds of more casual users have joined as well.” But… how many “heavy users” is that, exactly? 🤔 Based on current traffic (160–200K visits/month via SimilarWeb) and assuming: “Heavy users” = 1–5% of visitors 1/3 of them subscribe ➤ That gives ~300–1,700 core subs ➤ Add in casuals = ~1,000–3,000 total paid members Or more generously: 1,500 to 4,000. @NameBio want to confirm or surprise us? 😄🔍 #domains #namebio
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Someone is finally doing what I’ve wanted to do for years… A detailed recognition of successful domain investors. Shoutout to @mikemanndotcom, one of the top 5 domainers of all time. Great thread! 🧵👇🏻
Meet The Domainer Who Went From Losing 21 Domains To Facebook, Later Incurring $2 Million Renewal Debt To Making $50 Million In Lifetime Revenue... Large portfolio renewal fee has ruined the career of a lot of domainers... Not for this tenacious one. Open to know more about him.
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⚖️ Scaling in #Domaining: Why So Few Go Big? I think if you are profitable with 100 names, you will also be profitable with 1,000 or even 10,000 names. I believe that what works on a small scale works on a large scale too. So why is it that less than 1% of #domain investors have a portfolio of 10,000 #domains?
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🎉Ai Ai Ai and Ai 🎉 I just sold a domain! 🥳 Hold time: 35 months Cost: $11 renewals This is a one-word AI, category-defining domain very relevant in the biotech industry. Yes, I know many will say I super undersold it — Dynadot appraisal gave it a $25K value, and some might price it at $50K. But hey, it only cost me $11 when I registered it at the end of 2022, right when the ChatGPT and AI buzz started, and I’m happy with the funds. The only thing I regret is that the lander at Spaceship was priced the same as at Afternic. I didn’t update it — otherwise I could have priced higher at Afternic and paid no commission if the buyer chose that route, or kept more funds in my pocket if he bought via Spaceship. This domain was not acquired by a domainer, because I had it listed for $2K at Porkbun and Atom — there’s no way they missed that. What’s really interesting is that I submitted this domain months ago to Atom Premium, it only got approved two weeks ago for $7K (I haven’t approved it yet), and today — boom — it sold. No way this is a coincidence; they must have known something. The timeframe is too narrow.🤔 Today was the first time I took my laptop to the beach, and domaining in front of the sea is something else — great energy! While managing my portfolio and writing a different post for today, I saw many emails from Porkbun related to one of my domains being transferred out: "We have received a successful Afternic Fast Transfer command for your domain." In between, I missed the Afternic “congrats” email and thought, “Shit, a f***er is stealing my domain!” 😅 Then I found the congrats email. I’m officially adopting the beach as my everyday office now! 🌴😎🌊 #domainsold #domains
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MY BRAND NEW WORD: "DREAMAINER"😶‍🌫️ 💡Today I’m opening a new content section for laugh and learn called "Dreamainer", where I share #domains I once registered and believed had great potential to sell. I later dropped them because I decided they weren’t worth renewing and could be replaced with something better. Now, another #domainer has picked them up and priced them sky-high, making him the new dreamer—he just became a #Dreamainer. Because your broken dreams are someone else’s brand new dreams…
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📣 Recent update: "Within the last day or so, #GoDaddy added a "Reputable Search badge" to assure users that it does not register domain names for itself or partners based on customer searches." Well, well… GoDaddy was founded in 1997, which makes it 26 years old, and they’re only now assuring that they don’t front-run #domains? Why wait 26 years for that? It only proves they were front-running all this time.
⚠️RAISING AWARENESS: Godaddy front run domains you searched? Is 🍑GoDaddy registering good available domains for themselves that you previously searched for on their site using the search tool? 👀 Companies in the domain industry have extensive data and automated systems that allow them to have a HUGE leverage over the average #domainer. In other words, it's like a 10-year-old kid playing football against Leo Messi. ⚽️ Now, using this data and these systems allows them to register good domains in massive quantities the moment they drop after expiring. Many have purchase orders even before they expire, and all of this happens automatically. This is how they acquire thousands of domains EVERY SINGLE DAY. Is there a chance that once you search for a name in their search tool, if the domain is available and meets certain criteria that their system identifies as "valuable," they get a notification, and someone who works there decides to purchase the domain for the company's portfolio? Or even better, does the system automatically register it a few hours later? FRONT RUNNING 🏃‍♂️ What is an example of front running? Examples of Front Running: A broker receives an order from a client to purchase 100,000 shares in Company A. The broker knows that the large buy transaction is likely to drive up the price of the company's stock. Thus, he decides to purchase for himself 2,000 shares in Company A before executing the client's order. EXPERIENCES FROM USERS: Reading today a Quora article i found this comments from different users lets take a look:👇 🙅‍♂️Kris Yoges: Its True, We have software company and we using search domain to buy on godaddy in several occasion - we found available #domain once we marked and inform to adimn team When admin Team search next day or 2nd day that domain not available it not 1–2 or 3 days Its happens to use more than 50–60 times (i think the will sell for premium domain from our time) So we have stop searching domain from godaddy 🏃‍♂️Paagal Dev: Godaddy front runs #DomainNames ... I personally experienced it. I was searching for a certain domain name a week before. By the time i start searching the domain was available. I had to postpone my purchase because my credit card was missing. Later when i checked for the name after a few hours... it is booked by Godaddy .LLC and placed it on auction. 🙅‍♀️Deborah Clifton: "I searched for some domain names using GoDaddy, and they were all available. I put all the names in the checkout cart, but thought I'd check with my team before purchasing. A few days later I went back to GoDaddy to do the checkout and the cart was empty. I then searched for the #domains and each one was now taken, but GoDaddy gave a message that said they would be happy to negotiate the purchase of them for me if I paid them $69.95. I then went to WhoIs to find out who owned the domains, and...you guessed it...GoDaddy now owns them! Surely this is illegal, no?? And I recall when I first searched and carted those names, GoDaddy gave me a message saying the names were excellent because blah blah blah. I now realize that instead of giving me good info, this is in fact an algorithm that helps THEM identify great domain names that THEY can purchase. I'm so ticked... I will NEVER use GoDaddy again. 🙋‍♂️Vinodhsen Ethirajulu: "I agree with OP. This occured to me couple of times. Then I stopped using the domain search facility in godaddy" 🙎‍♂️Indu Pillai: "It is perfectly possible that they’re stealing the domain names whenever they find those domain names attractive. Same was the case with me an year ago. I was buying a domain name, and there was some problem with my credit card. Only after 30 minutes or so when I tried again the domain name was parked. Since then I never used GoDaddy again. And as you mentioned in your question, my domain name was very tricky and it was impossible for anyone else to guess it at that day and at that very moment." 🍷John Smart: "GoDaddy have the ethics of a near bankrupt alcoholic lawyer. Not nice people. No ethics. But they have a model that makes them a ton of money. And a moderately good name in the public eye do they can sell many many more." 🕵️‍♂️Anonymous: "I'll say yes personally speaking. Some weeks ago i found good short words expired domain about 3–4 domains with rich keywords. One of this domain caught my eye because it was a two word domain 11 in total [Technology niche] I was going to register the domain and resell it. So for a week plus i obversed the domain including backlinks and everything that has to do with finding a good expired domain. Everyday i kept checking the domain to see if it has been registered. Surprisedly, it was not i notice the domain had expired for about 90–100 days before i found the domain. So i checked the domain on Godaddy and #NameCheap for a cheaper registration price. The next day i was ready to buy the domain. I found out the domain has been registered barely 24hours. I checked whois Domain Names & Identity for Everyone and found out the domain was registered that same day and parked at Make Your Own Way | GoDaddy . I was really pained did some research on google and saw other people complaining same issue. Till this date the remaining 3 domain i didn't check on godaddy are still not registered." 👳‍♂️Chris Rivera: "WOW! I was going to register a domain name for a business I'm starting. The name is pretty unique. We looked it up using #GoDaddy and it was available so we agreed to use this domain. I went to register it 3 days later and it was taken. I looked at the whose who and it was registered the same freaking day we were looking it up on Go Daddy. More importantly I went to the site and it has go daddy ads all over it. Could this seriously have happened? I was going to use Go Daddy for our hosting, but now it seems like you shouldn't even use it to look up available domain names. There is no way this happened by chance...which makes me wonder how the heck did it happen?" MY CONCLUSION 🧐 Jack: I don't have a way to check if they do that, but I think it's possible for them to do it if they want. Let's imagine for a second that they tested that option in the past and it yielded profitable results. Then why wouldn't they continue doing it? And I'm not just talking about GoDaddy; this could be done by many other registrars. When you search for a domain, that information doesn't just disappear after you close the tab. It's archived and analyzed, similar to how #Google saves all the billions and trillions of searches users perform, or how #Facebook uses information for marketing purposes. Even if we assume that registrars don't register the valuable domains you searched for and didn't register, they use that information to understand what is "hot." They can immediately identify when a new trend is born, and they can use this information, which they have ahead of the majority in the industry, to their own advantage, and they will not share that information with us, even when they got that information from us in the first place. They will give us instead useless information like "most selling keywords of the month", which are almost the same every month. The rest of information they do not share with us, which is 99.99% of the data they have. Everybody knows but if you dont: GoDaddy have huge portfolios, they have millions of domains, they bought for hundreds of millions $$ portfolios from big domainers with real premium domains and with ultra premium domains too. We never know, but just in case... 1 - i always check if a domain is available through a small registrar not owned by the big companies. 2 - don't add the domain to the cart if you are not planning to register it immediately. 3 - save the list of domains you want to purchase later on a paper list, in excel, or in google sheets, not in the registrar wish list, cart or saved domains to purchase later. DOMAINS ARE MONEY 💵 IF A MAN SEE A BILL ON THE STREET HE WILL PICK IT UP! IF A DOMAINER SEE A VALUABLE DOMAIN AVAILABLE, HE WILL PICK IT UP! IF A REGISTRAR SEE A VALUABLE DOMAIN AVAILABLE THEY WILL PICK IT UP! What do you think? share your opinion so we can find out more things. #Domainers, hope you found valuable information here, and helped you to open your eyes a little bit. Share, Like or Comment. ❤️
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THE 4TH DIMENSION IS REAL... Imagine someone asking from end users for a few thousand, and from domainers a few hundred, for a domain they wouldn't even register for $11 if they see it available. 😆 That’s the kind of discrepancy in this industry among domain investors. Or even worse – asking a few thousand for the same worthless domain from top domain investors just because they’re millionaires and can afford it. 🤦🏻‍♀️ To compare, it’s like the worst basketball player in the local school autographing his own shoes and trying to sell them to Michael Jordan for a few thousand. That’s hilarious! #Domainers are crazy! 😂
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⚠️ Note: If you notice a third hand coming out of his pants between his legs, just ignore it. That’s completely normal, they’re well known for being “gifted” in that area.
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Platform makes no difference when the TLD is 💩. "Fast sale" is like water, and ".xyz" is like oil (snake oil) – they just don’t mix. But if you insist, I’d add "Swetha" as one option too. So far, it seems to be the fastest source of magically selling even low-quality keywords on .xyz at crazy high prices. If you don’t own a one-word, super high-quality keyword, the chances of making a sale on .xyz are extremely low. Sure, some people with low-quality names manage a few sales here and there on .xyz – but some people also win the lottery. That doesn’t mean it’s easy to win the lottery; it’s just luck probabilities high number of gamblers. It only takes one big sale in a poopy TLD to get everyone suddenly interested – like people automatically turning into flies 🪰🪰🪰. We learned that lesson the hard way. Just avoid the buzz and stay focused on the AI trend, which is a real worldwide trend. 🌎 💪🏻 Unlike .xyz domains, so far, no one is complaining about Ai related #domains people are doing well. So don't fix what is not broken. No one cares about .xyz anymore regardless of a sudden high sale, that is not the bread and butter in domains. #dotxyz #xyz = 💩
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Which one is the fast seller platform for .xyz domains?
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🚀 Shoutout to @domainpro for building @DNX a platform with all listings in one place filters! Now everyone knows it and uses it… but just for the record: I was the first DNX supporter 🥇 I believed in it, had the vision that it would become something big in the future, and even posted about it before the owners themselves. In fact, I mentioned it back in January 2023, an entire year before the platform was built and launched. So, if anyone here posted about DNX before me, drop your post, and i will gift you one of my domains! 😉 #Domains #DNX
DNX.COM Domain Name Exchange What a great name for a #domain platform/brandable marketplace/registry/registrar. The best 3L for the business. Is better name than Dan, etc. Plus @DNX is powered by @MediaOptions, they have everything to make it #1 DN marketplace!
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🚨 Domainers CAN make a change!💪 Just 1 week ago, Atom updated its policy: 👉 “If a sale happens through a registrar and meets our pricing policy, no commission is owed to Atom.” And guess what? This shift came less than 6 days after my post calling out shameless #BrandBucket for taking ~35% in fees on sales that went through Afternic (another ~17%) = 52% fees taken from the seller.💸 That post reached ~5,000 industry people… and clearly the right reader saw it 👀 But here’s the catch: ❌ Afternic is NOT a registrar. ✅ Spaceship & Namecheap ARE. ✅ Dynadot & Porkbun ARE So if a buyer finds and buy your domain through #GoDaddy → it’s still counted as an #Afternic sale, and you’ll pay both Atom & Afternic fees. 💩 👉 This update isn’t perfect— but it’s already halfway better than the old rule where Atom wanted fees no matter where you sold. We need to keep pushing for more ethical brandable marketplaces, but we also have the power to influence change a little more in our favor. More info about this Atom recent change: 1) helpdesk.atom.com/en/article… 2) atom.com/blog/expanding-doma…
🚨 Warning to domain sellers: BrandBucket is a nightmare! 🚨 This is one of many reasons why BrandBucket is a disgusting platform and the worst place to list your #domains. The seller received only $1,355, even though the sale price was over $2,500 (an 84.5% higher value!) The domain was listed on BrandBucket for $2,080, so BB took 34.86% in fees! including a $100 fee for the logo 💩 And the sale didn’t even come through BrandBucket, the buyer purchased the domain via Afternic, which took another 16.8% in fees! As a result, the seller lost 51.66% of the funds to these predatory companies. Shame on them. The seller had been renewing the #domain for over 8 years, carried all the costs, and in the end, #BrandBucket took $725 for doing absolutely nothing.
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“Imitation is the best form of flattery” If marketplaces are following in your footsteps, it’s a sign you’re leading, and they’re behind. Here’s a perfect example of Spaceship’s impact on the industry: other platforms are now trying to replicate it. But the question is... why now? This is how I imagine the situation... Domainers: "Hey domain platforms, you should put some effort into making better landers for us, because what you’re offering looks outdated and visually poor." Domain platforms: "Why should we spend time and resources making better-looking landers if no one else in the market is offering that? It probably won’t make a difference—not for buyers, and not in the number of sellers choosing our landers." Richard from Spaceship: "No one in the market is offering a fair lander for domainers that actually matches the design standards of the modern era. That’s reason enough to build it myself." Two Doritos later... Domain platforms: "Why is everyone moving to Spaceship? Why is there so much buzz?... Oh! It’s because their landers actually work and deliver a UX for 2025, while ours look like they’re still stuck in 2000. Let’s copy the same thing—just change the colors so it doesn’t look too obvious." This is a simplified way of showing how #domain platforms got too comfortable for too long. They won’t make changes unless someone else does it first, starts taking more market share every month, and forces them to compete out of desperation, just to avoid becoming irrelevant. Keep going, @spaceship—the whole domain industry is following you, competitors included 😂
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🔁 When “Swap” Isn’t About Crypto Anymore… Regardless of the industry, they all get branding. Every industry has its power keywords, study each one meticulously. Here, it looks like “sis,” “perv,” and “swap” are the hot ones. Until today, I honestly thought “swap” was only a crypto keyword. 😅 "Labs" is the one that has no limits. And Family themes have been trending for the last 20 years. We’ve got SisSwap, PervMom, NotMyGrandpa, and DadCrush. Even “GoDaddy” and “Brandpa” feel like they belong right in the mix. 😂 So… what #domains are you holding for this industry? 🍑
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Logos have fascinated me since I was a kid. As domainers, we’re naturally connected to them. So I’m curious: Which logos of your own #domains are your absolute favorites? Drop them in the comments 👇🏻
Let's not overcorrect with the trad-logo hype. Logos are difficult to analyze, in that the only thing we can say is the following—The purpose of a logomark is to distinguish a brand from the rest. There are a few exceptions, maybe if you're a corn trader, you'd want the logo to be similar to other corn traders and unlike other wheat traders. But by and large, its purpose is to be distinctive and provide a basis for a company's identity. The problem with trad logomarks is the semiological complexity—takes longer to recognize, dilutes distinctiveness and they become a fuzzy blob in the visual field, especially if they're in a high visual noise environment with other logos (retail shops, catalogs, etc). One of the culprits is the outline shape: shields, roundels, plates, etc. are SNR destroyers. Strong ("minimal") logos have high SNR and one of the main reasons for that is a distinctive outline shape. Best logo designers achieve a great balance between visual complexity and recognizability. Lance Wyman, Anton Stankowski, Paul Rand, Ikko Tanaka, Ivan Chermayeff, Kashiwa Sato and many others knew this. No one puts this so explicitly, and in a highly impactful presentation as Saul Bass's AT&T pitch (search on YT). There is a bias in the image below (well known brands vs. unknown logos that I found from victorian era), but try to ignore it and it is obvious, objectively, which side has higher SNR.
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