Saturday, June 30, 2007

AuctionAds Wins eBay Star Developer Award

MediaWhiz Division AuctionAds Wins eBay Star Developer Award for ''Most Innovative Application-Buyer'' eBay Developers Conference

 June 21, 2007 - NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--AuctionAds, a division of MediaWhiz Holdings Inc., today announced it received the eBay Star Developer Award for "Most Innovative Application-Buyer" at the sixth annual eBay Developers Conference. AuctionAds (www.auctionads.com) enables users to monetize their website by displaying live eBay auctions next to their related copy.

"We are honored to accept this prestigious award, which recognizes that AuctionAds is a successful tool for leveraging the lucrative eBay affiliate system, in a way that is easy for publishers to use," stated AuctionAds CTO David Dellanave.

"The eBay Star Developers Awards recognize developers for their innovation and commitment to the eBay platform," said Max Mancini, senior director of disruptive innovation at eBay. "AuctionAds was awarded for its efficiency using innovative caching techniques, allowing it to serve up 30 million impressions a month with only 200,000 API calls, an impressive volume of traffic per API call."

The eBay Developers Conference in Boston brings together more than 500 third-party developers, entrepreneurs and affiliates to meet with technologists and business leaders from eBay, PayPal, ProStores, Shopping.com and Skype.

About AuctionAds

AuctionAds (www,auctionads.com), a division of MediaWhiz Holdings Inc., users to monetize their website by displaying live eBay auctions next to their related copy.

About MediaWhiz

MediaWhiz is a leading online marketing company delivering a fully integrated solution for brand advertisers, direct marketers and publishers by leveraging its suite of marketing services to achieve measurable results. Services include affiliate marketing, lead generation, email marketing, list management, display advertising, text link advertising and search marketing. MediaWhiz delivers more than 3 million monthly leads to over 3,000 advertisers through its database of more than 100 million consumer email addresses and relationships with over 20,000 publishers. Private equity firm Lake Capital first invested in MediaWhiz in August 2005. Through acquisitions and organic growth, MediaWhiz has established its position as a leading provider of integrated marketing. More information on MediaWhiz is available at www,mediawhiz.com.
Contacts

Berns Communications Group
Joshua Greenwald / Megan Prock
212-994-4660

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Domain Name Portfolio Sale

Domain Name Portfolio Announced for Sale

A powerful real estate domain name portfolio composed of all 50 U.S. state names is for sale. Housing Predictor.com announced the news.

Destin, FL (PRWEB) June 26, 2007 -- A powerful real estate domain name portfolio composed of all 50 U.S. state names is for sale. The announcement of the portfolio was made by the developer of Housing Predictor.com, an information driven web site, which provides more than 250 local housing market forecasts in all 50 states.

It's been said to be one of the richest domain name portfolios to ever come along, and it even includes Washington D.C. as a bonus. Every name in this premium collection starts with the word Find, followed by each state name, and ends in Houses.com like
http://www.FindCaliforniaHouses.com. All of the domains are currently in use on the web and may be accessed online.

Real estate is one of the top five topics visitors search for on the Internet, and the purchaser of this real estate domain name portfolio will be able to write their own ticket.

A prototype program to market real estate in the next generation is already quietly underway in Florida. Crews are out collecting video of each and every major city in Florida to show the exterior of homes. Eventually it's clearly the way real estate will be marketed and sold almost without a need to visit a home. Studies show 80% of all buyers and sellers of real estate now go to the Internet first to conduct research and view listings.

This real estate domain name portfolio, which is composed of all 50 U.S. state names, could be used to explode innovative real estate marketing on the net like never before.

Names like this don't come along every day and they offer endless possibilities. They will provide the new owner the competitive edge in today's new world of marketing. Netscape now estimates there are more than100 million web sites on the Internet, and the web is growing like never before.

This domain name portfolio could be a network of sites providing the search for real estate listings in every state of the nation. It might be developed into a video streaming network, providing high tech tours outside in the neighborhoods and provide a virtual tour of the inside of the home with a sound track narrated by a broadcast professional.

As web 2.0 becomes more and more a part of the Internet the possibilities are countless. For more information on this domain name portfolio visit http://www.EzRealEstateReferrals.com

#+##

Press Contact: Mike Colpitts
Company Name: Housing Predictor
Phone: 850 622-1016
Website:
http://www.ezrealestatereferrals.com

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Will AuctionAds Wean Ebay From Google?

You may have heard about the tiff between Ebay and Google that resulted in ebay stopping their PPC advertising on Google for a short while. According to this post, it seems the results were not really all that much given the overall traffic that ebay gets from Google without the paid traffic. My question is that with the way AuctionAds is ramping up with so many webmasters adding the ads to their sites, could this result in ebay dropping paid ads from Google long term?

Monday, June 25, 2007

Search At Ebay, Shop At Google?

GoogleBay, Or EGoogle?

by Mark Simon, Monday, June 25, 2007
AS OF TODAY, EBAY WILL be turning its search ads on within Google -- ending a spat between Google and one of its largest advertisers that's drawn comparisons to a lover's quarrel.

But while the ad standoff may be over, the rivalry has really just begun. EBay and Google, after all, are starting to look more alike every day, and they're headed towards a very similar future. And as their turf continues to overlap, we'll see the eBay-Google spat as a lot more than a tiff -- we'll recognize it for the opening volley in the next great Internet war.

A quick comparison of where Google and eBay are headed will show you what I mean.

Google, the eTail Platform

The first point to consider is that search advertising programs aren't true advertising programs. They're platforms that connect buyers with sellers. Buyers request products or services, and they're shown suppliers who can fulfill those needs. Which suppliers are matched with a buyer is determined, largely, by auction.

And Google's Pay-Per-Action program pulls ads still further away from what we traditionally think of as ads. By driving a particular interaction with the advertiser's business -- be it an e-mail signup or even a sale -- Pay-Per-Action is closer to a shopping cart service or a CRM system than it is to an ad system. Ads tell buyers about businesses; Pay-Per-Action ads live, at least partially, within the businesses themselves.

Currently, Pay-Per-Action lives within Google's content network, not on Google Search. But the program is expanding: last week, Google launched Pay-Per-Action in 24 languages. Expect to see Pay-Per-Action on Google SERPs within the next two years.

Finally, Google Checkout -- Google's payment system and PayPal competitor -- allows Google to serve as the system through which businesses collect payments.

When you add it all up, you get the following picture: Google is a service that uses auctions to match buyers and sellers, and which creates an environment allowing an entire transaction to happen -- from initial contact to final payment. Which, to me, sounds a lot like eBay.

EBay, the Search Engine

If Google is becoming eBay, the same can be said in reverse: EBay is becoming Google.

EBay, at its core, is really a product search engine. Whatever you're looking to buy, you can find it in eBay's site search feature. A visit to eBay.com even places your cursor within the eBay search bar immediately.

Over the coming months, look for eBay to become still more like a typical engine. While eBay currently features search results based on auctions' expiration times, Bog Tedeschi reports in The New York Times that eBay is looking to deliver relevancy-based search listings, based "in part by how well sellers have been rated by other buyers."

Once eBay acts more like a typical, relevancy-based search engine, eBay -- not Google -- may become the new leader in the product search sphere. Google may stay far ahead in share of searches, but eBay has the power to gain far more conversions per search than even Google can. And it's conversions, not searches, that ultimately earn money for search businesses.

The Two Futures are the Same

It's not just that Google is turning into eBay, and vice-versa. Both companies are headed to a collision course in the new horizon of auction-based advertising.

Google's realized that, if it can sell one type of advertising in an auction, it can do the same with many other types of ads -- including print and radio. EBay, for its part, understands that advertising has become a new commodity, which means that eBay can sell advertising through auction just as it sells nearly every other commodity imaginable through auctions. Enter the eBay Media Marketplace, eBay's auction marketplace for buying and selling traditional ad inventory.

The Future is the Environment

Taken together, all of this spells a very different future for the business of search. If Google and eBay continue on their current course, the search business won't just focus on ads: it will be a business of automated sales environments, in which auctions serve as the gateways, but those environments reach every touchpoint from initial contact to sale.

As the current leader in search and auction-based advertising, Google clearly has an advantage in that future. But eBay is the leader in auction-based business environments, so don't rule it out.

Indeed, eBay is already giving Google a real challenge. The eBay Media Marketplace -- created at the request of major advertisers like Wal-Mart and Toyota -- already has a TV network partner in Oxygen. Google, meanwhile, is still talking about entering the TV business as a long-term dream. So whoever wins, both eBay and Google are in for a long, hard slog.

In its pro-Checkout "Let Freedom Ring" party, Google borrowed symbolism from the American Revolution to challenge eBay. By comparing eBay v. Google to armed conflict, Google may have hit closer to the mark than it realized. Google must have sensed that both parties are in for a long, hard slog.

Correction: Friday's Search Insider incorrectly stated the number of people in the U.S. who are members of a racial or ethnic minority. It is actually a bit more than 100 million, not 300 million.

Mark Simon is vice president of industry relations at Did-it, an agency for search engine marketing and auctioned media management based in New York. You can reach Mark at msimon@did-it.com. 

Search Insider for Monday, June 25, 2007:
http://publications.mediapost.com
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Sunday, June 24, 2007

If she were MY domain, I'd....

Today we took a little visit to Reinvent Technology's web site, the company that is owned by Kevin Ham. We were looking for press releases that we could use on our site as content. We first checked Google and were disappointed to find nothing new and actually a lack of any recent news as well.

We need more content because if it all dries up no one will visit our site and well I'm sure you know how depressing THAT would be...

So while there were no press releases or news there, we did notice that they have a list of domains the company owns and we thought our domainer readers would be interested in knowing what they were.

So here is the list that we found on  http://www.reinvent.com/domains.html: 

3dAnimation.com
AcousticGuitars.com
Actor.com
AdventureJobs.com
AffiliateMarketing.com
Alcohol.com
Alcoholics.com
ArticleFinder.com
AskQuestions.com
Attorney.com
AutoLocater.com
AutoTrading.com
Awning.com
BabyGifts.com
BabyShowerGames.com
Baptism.com
BarbadosRentals.com
BarCodeScanners.com
BargainHotels.com
Be.com
Beat.com
BestFlights.com
BibleCollege.com
BicyleVacations.com
BioChemistry.com
BoardingSchool.com
Bogota.com
BonAppetite.com
BonBon.com
BrainBusters.com
BridalBouquets.com
BridalDresses.com
BudgetVacations.com
BuyAutos.com
CameraPhone.com
CanadaNews.com
Car.net
CarDecals.com
CarDetailing.com
CardScanner.com
CareerPathways.com
CareerTest.com
CarFinancing.com
CarPaint.com
CarpetDealers.com
CarPhone.com
CarRent.com
CashPayDay.com
CellularPhones.com
CheapScooters.com
CheapTires.com
CheapTravel.com
ChildrenGames.com
ClassmateFinder.com
CollectableDolls.com
ColonialHomes.com
Commercials.com
Consolidate.com
CouponSaver.com
CreditRating.com
CreditReportOnline.com
CrossStich.com
CruiseFinder.com
Cycle.com
Cyprus.org
DesignerDresses.com
Diabetic.org
Dialysis.com
DiscountAuto.com
DiscountCruise.com
DiscountVacation.com
Diseases.com
DogBeds.com
DogKennel.com
DownloadRingtones.com
DownloadSongs.com
DreamAnalysis.com
DrugAddictions.com
DvdCovers.com
ElementarySchool.com
Elyrics.com
EmploySearch.com
Eparty.com
Etextbooks.com
Eticket.com
ExpensiveCars.com
ExtremeGames.com
FaxOnline.com
FicaScore.com
FileShare.com
FlightChecker.com
ForceField.com
Francais.com
FreeHost.com
FreeLegalAdvice.com
FreeMusicVideos.com
FreePhoto.com
FreeTones.com
FreeVideo.com
FunnySongs.com
FurnishedApartments.com
FurniturePatio.com
Garnets.com
GeoThermal.com
GoldMarket.com
GolfInFlorida.com
GolfSwings.com
GospelMusic.com
GroupHomes.com
Hairs.com
HawaiianWedding.com
HawaiiVacationHomes.com
HDTV.com
Headstones.com
HealthCareers.com
HermitCrab.com
HooverDam.com
HouseSeeker.com
IncomeFromHome.com
Infertility.com
InkRefills.com
InMotion.com
Innovations.com
Instrumentals.com
InternetStats.com
Investigator.com
InvitationCards.com
Kalahari.com
KidsVacations.com
LaHotels.com
Laptop.com
LastMinuteTravelDeals.com
LasVegasShowTickets.com
LCD.com
LCDprojector.com
LeatherHandbags.com
LivingRooms.com
LoansForBadCredit.com
Lupus.com
MauiVacationHomes.com
MBAdegree.com
MedicalBracelets.com
MedicalCodes.com
MedicalHealth.com
MedicalHelp.com
Medrx.com
MexicoChat.com
MobileHomeParks.com
ModularHome.com
MontegoBay.com
MortgageCalculators.com
Mother.com
MovieSearch.com
MusicShare.com
MyMeds.com
NaturalRemedies.com
NewCellPhones.com
Notebook.com
NowAndForever.com
NurseFinder.com
NY.org
NYC.org
OnlineBanking.com
OnlineCreditReports.com
OnlineCreditReport.com
OrganicWine.com
Orthotics.com
OverSeaJobs.com
PChardware.com
PeopleSearch.com
PersonalChoice.com
Pharmaceutical.com
PhysicianSearch.com
Planetarium.com
PlayGame.com
Preview.com
Proverbs.com
PublicSchools.com
PuppyTraining.com
QAtester.com
RaceCars.com
Rapture.com
Refurbished.com
Religion.com
Reptile.com
ResumeBuilders.com
RoutePlanner.com
SalesTraining.com
SchoolGrants.com
ScooterDepot.com
SlideShows.com
SecondWorldWar.com
ServiceDogs.com
SevenWonders.com
SevenWondersOfTheWorld.com
Sidekicks.com
Sitcom.com
Skateboard.net
Skins.com
Slapshot.com
SlumberParty.com
SoapOpera.com
SongText.com
SpainHoliday.com
Spanish.com
SpanishTeacher.com
SpanishTranslations.com
Spyware.net
StockAnalysis.com
StorageUnits.com
Streetrods.com
StudentCollegeLoan.com
TahoeAccomodations.com
TanningSalons.com
TestEquipment.com
TheHolyBible.com
TimeShare.org
TrailerHomes.com
TrainingDogs.com
TravelFares.com
TravelLastMinute.com
TravelPlanner.com
TravelShop.com
TubalLigation.com
TummyTucks.com
TypeOnline.com
UnclaimedFunds.com
UsedBikes.com
UsedSUV.com
USmail.com
USweather.com
UtahVacations.com
VacationGetaways.com
Vacuum.org
Venture.com
Vest.com
Vids.com
VirtualLibrary.com
WasteContainers.com
WebPageMaker.com
WebStats.com
WeddingGowns.com
WeddingInvitation.com
WeddingShoes.com
Wire.com
WishingWell.com
WorkUniforms.com

I took a look about a dozen of these domains and I was struck by how pedestrian most of the parking pages were. I didn't see that any were what I would consider optimized and I would have expected that the owner would have these puppies humming with really nice templates and some kind of content.

Perhaps they generate so much income as they are that it's not a concern. None that I saw had any Google PageRank either. I did find one site that had a link to actor.com and it looks like the domain used to have a real site at one point...

If it were my domain I'd... "What would you do daddy, what would you do?"
Well, if it was MY domain, I'd... "What would you do daddy, what would you do?"
Smother that domain in Keywords and Wikipedia re-writes,
And host it on my own.

-With Regrets to Zappa Frank "Brown Shoes Dont Make It"








Millionaires Among Us - Vancouver's Domainers Cashing In

Millionaires Among Us - Vancouver's Domainers Cashing In
By Julianna
The article came on the heals of Business 2.0 Magazine's cover story about Vancouver resident Kevin Ham, proclaiming him "the most powerful dotcom mogul you have never heard of". Arguably the most successful domainer in the world, ...
WebnamesBlog.ca -
http://webnamesblog.ca

Money, Money, Money
By Sean Charnock
The article is about Kevin Ham, who has built a $300 Million Dollar portfolio of domain names. $100000 for Greeting.com, and $31000 for Christianrock.com and so on. He's a domain name mogul. In a technology world, this seems to be the ...
TheInnerLayer -- where SL'ers... -
http://theinnerlayer.softlayer.com/

SHOW ME THE MONEY - PAULA MOONEY'S MAKING MONEY ON THE INTERNET LIST
By The Old Vic(The Old Vic)
Kevin Ham ($300 million - although not $300 million a year it must be said) and 2. Frank Schilling ($20 million - again not annually) to the bottom 118. Fame Fire with $19 (well done for having the guts to admit it but it could prove to ...
NET MONETIZATION -
http://www.netmonetization.com/

Monday, June 18, 2007

Cameroon Auctioned Its Internet Namespace

Technology: How Cameroon Auctioned Its Internet Namespace
African Path - Minneapolis,MN,USA
According to the article, the brain behind it all is Kevin Ham, described as "the most powerful dotcom mogul you've never heard of"
http://www.africanpath.com/p_blogEntry.cfm?blogEntryID=1060


To Own The Internet
By SCUBILLOS
According to Business 2.0 magazine, Kevin Ham is the "most powerful dotcom mogul," after building a $300 million empire by bidding on successful domain names at auctions (like those at The Venetian in Las Vegas.) Even though the dot-com ...
-
http://www.businessquickie.com/

The business of domain names
By Michael Tavani(Michael Tavani)
Kevin Ham is the most powerful dotcom mogul you've never heard of, reports Business 2.0 Magazine. Here's how the master of Web domains built a $300 million empire. And by the way chalklit.com, theyup.com (young urban professional), ...
Urban Eola -
http://www.urbaneola.com/

Yahoo Outsmarts Google in Cameroon Domain Play ?
By ekwogefee
Kevinham In the June cover story of Business2.0, The Man Who Owns The Internet, I write about how a domainer named Kevin Ham struck a deal with the government of Cameroon to set up a wildcard -- a line of software code that reroutes all ...
-
http://ekwogefee.akopo.com

The Ultimate Way To Get Rich From Domain Name Typos
By Luke
I read this article in Business 2.0 magazine the other day and was amazed not only by how many domain names Kevin Ham owns, but also by his ingenious idea to grab traffic for unregistered domain names. Basically, he struck a deal with ...
borloz.com -
http://borloz.com

The man who owns the Internet
By michaeljung
The man at the top of this little-known hierarchy is Kevin Ham -- one of a handful of major-league "domainers" in the world and arguably the shrewdest and most ambitious of the lot. Even in a field filled with unusual career paths, ...
-
http://michaeljung.wordpress.com

Looking for Google's Future? You Can Buy It On EBay

Looking for Google's Future? You Can Find It On EBay

by Mark Simon, Monday, June 18, 2007

THE GOOGLE worldview is a thoroughly binary one. There are Google users, and then there's everyone else. Google users are treated like royalty. Everyone else is a potential resource for users -- nothing less, and nothing more. That view has made many enemies for the Frienemy over the years. It's also made it the unrivaled information resource on the Web.

But times are changing.

As Google expands far beyond search -- and into a vast array of online and offline businesses, from TV advertising to software applications -- Google will need to think beyond the basic terms of Google services and users. It will need to think in terms of partnerships with a slew of different companies and organizations. To understand how drastic a shift that is, consider last week's spat between Google and eBay.

For a while now, Google has been looking to push Google Checkout, its PayPal competitor, onto the eBay system. In a move to flex its muscles so eBay would pay heed, Google invited eBay Live! conference attendees to a Google party, posted on the Google Checkout blog under the heading "Let Freedom Ring." In that same post, Google referred to the party as "a celebration of user choice." The "choice" here was the choice of different payment systems within eBay -- PayPal or, if Google gets its way, Google Checkout.

EBay was not amused. In retaliation, it pulled all of its monthly $26 million in spend out of Google advertising. Google hurriedly cancelled the party; but the damage was already done. As of this writing, the eBay ads have yet to return to the Google SERP.

The party seemed like an audacious move on Google's part -- but it was largely in keeping with Google's style. In the party invitation, Google presented itself as a solution that gives eBay users more choice. It's the old model of users, with Google's help, up against the rest of the world. It's not so different from the way Google ignores protests of news organizations, book publishers, and the occasional porn provider about Google News, Google Book Search, and Google Image Search (respectively) -- all by arguing that Google is providing a better end-result for search users.

But what Google has failed to grasp is that eBay is different. Google can antagonize news organizations, book publishers, and the adult industry, because it doesn't hold major partnerships with them. But eBay, as Google's largest advertiser until last week, was a true partner. And offending partners doesn't make for good business.

As Google looks to expand its kingdom in both scope and depth across the information universe, partnerships with other businesses will become increasingly important -- and there will be far fewer bridges Google can afford to burn. Consider, for example, how much Google will need to rely on the entertainment industry's help in making good on its $1.6 billion YouTube buy. If it wants to keep YouTube traffic long-term, Google will need the professional content that, in pirated form, currently drives so much of YouTube's viewership. To keep that professional content flowing, Google will need the help of the very Hollywood businesses that it's alienated since buying YouTube last winter.

Even Google's relationship with users themselves is becoming more complex. As Google looks to provide more and better search information, it's also gathering more personal information. As I wrote two weeks ago, the numbers aren't in yet on how comfortable the world is or is not with Google and privacy. But many users are bound to feel that Google is spying on them, and privacy issues will only become more serious as personalized search ramps up, while Google Street View goes full-steam.

The lesson here for Google is that it's not 1998 anymore. Google is no longer leading users as, together, they shape the infant Web into whatever it can become. Google is #241 on the Fortune 500, sells for over $500 a share, and is looking to expand far beyond its unrivaled leadership on a fully-established Internet. Google is no longer the maverick upstart. Google is the establishment.

I, for one, think that's great -- when was the last time such a smart, user-friendly company joined the establishment? But being part of the establishment means that you have a lot more friends to lose, that there are more toes you risk stepping on, and that consumers won't necessarily reward you as a friend -- they'll see you as a corporation providing a service.

And so a decade after it began, Google can't afford to act as a lone player anymore. If it does, we might see a lot more partners than eBay jumping ship.

Mark Simon is vice president of industry relations at Did-it, an agency for search engine marketing and auctioned media management based in New York. You can reach Mark at msimon@did-it.com. 

Search Insider for Monday, June 18, 2007:
http://publications.mediapost.com

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[ Editor's comments: What's funny about the timing of all this is that the new advertising system from AuctionAds uses the vast inventory at eBay to create ads which people can use on their blogs and web sites, just as they do with the ads from Google. The system is catching on quickly and may overwhelm the company providing the service if they don't watch out!

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Ebay AuctionAds Debut Coup?

EBay cancels ads in tiff with Google
Los Angeles Times - CA,USA
EBay is one of Google's biggest advertisers. The search engine funnels millions of Web surfers to the auction site. But the two companies have grown ...

EBay threatens to pull ads off Google
MSNBC - USA
Google's retreat came only after Ebay cut some of its advertising spending on the company's search site, in what appeared to be a blunt attempt to warn ...

By now, ebay has to have taken notice of what the company behind AuctionAds has done and started to realize that at least where the content network is concerned, they could do a lot better. If you have not see the ads from AuctionAds yet, they are a cross between the small text ads that you see from Google, and the multi-tabbed ads (Which are cool) from that loser company Chitika (Don't get me started on them. It's enough to say they dropped me and treated me like shit. Try them at your own risk, but do some searches in Google first before you waste your time with them.).
 
AuctionAds are as easy to use as AdSense, but the two nice things are that 1) they include a small image from each auction, which most AdSensers know greatly improves click-through rates, and 2) you can choose the keywords to target the ads to your site. The keyword targeted takes a little extra work that you don't have with contextual ads like Google's, but from what I have seen it pays off. There's no learning curve and if you are not happy with the ads you see you can make some changes. To see a good example of how this works, visit our site: http://www.EbayAuctionAds.com and you can test out the results.
 
I think you have to have considerable site traffic to realize the best results, or a site that gets traffic related to shopping or products. We had positive results right away, but we still have to keep our day job for now. Most site owners are reporting results as good or better than ours so it's worth testing on at least one site for sure.
 
Since Google has been discouraging the use of images placed closed next to AdSense Ads, I can see more people trying AuctionAds, and perhaps in some cases replacing AdSense if the income is there. What I expect to see is Google responding to this new attention to ebay as a revenue generator by allowing advertisers to add small images to be placed next to their ads, OR providing a library of images that advertisers can select from as relating to their products and services.

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Botnet Cyber Crime Has Million Of Potential Victims

Over 1 Million Potential Victims of Botnet Cyber Crime

On June 13, 2007 the Department of Justice and FBI announced the results of an ongoing cyber crime initiative to disrupt and dismantle "botherders" and elevate the public's cyber security awareness of botnets. OPERATION BOT ROAST is a national initiative and ongoing investigations have identified over 1 million victim computer IP addresses. The FBI is working with our industry partners, including the CERT Coordination Center at Carnegie Mellon University, to notify the victim owners of the computers. Through this process the FBI may uncover additional incidents in which botnets have been used to facilitate other criminal activity.

A botnet is a collection of compromised computers under the remote command and control of a criminal "botherder." Most owners of the compromised computers are unknowing and unwitting victims. They have unintentionally allowed unauthorized access and use of their computers as a vehicle to facilitate other crimes, such as identity theft, denial of service attacks, phishing, click fraud, and the mass distribution of spam and spyware. Because of their widely distributed capabilities, botnets are a growing threat to national security, the national information infrastructure, and the economy.

"The majority of victims are not even aware that their computer has been compromised or their personal information exploited," said FBI Assistant Director for the Cyber Division James Finch. "An attacker gains control by infecting the computer with a virus or other malicious code and the computer continues to operate normally. Citizens can protect themselves from botnets and the associated schemes by practicing strong computer security habits to reduce the risk that your computer will be compromised."

The FBI also wants to thank our industry partners, such as the Microsoft Corporation and the Botnet Task Force, in referring criminal botnet activity to law enforcement.

Cyber security tips include updating anti-virus software, installing a firewall, using strong passwords, practicing good email and web security practices. Although this will not necessarily identify or remove a botnet currently on the system, this can help to prevent future botnet attacks. More information on botnets and tips for cyber crime prevention can be found online at www.fbi.gov.

The FBI will not contact you online and request your personal information so be wary of fraud schemes that request this type of information, especially via unsolicited emails. To report fraudulent activity or financial scams, contact the nearest FBI office or police department, and file a complaint online with the Internet Crime Complaint Center, www.ic3.gov.

To date, the following subjects have been charged or arrested in this operation with computer fraud and abuse in violation of Title 18 USC 1030, including:

    * James C. Brewer of Arlington, Texas, is alleged to have operated a botnet that infected Chicago area hospitals. This botnet infected tens of thousands of computers worldwide. (FBI Chicago);

    * Jason Michael Downey of Covington, Kentucky, is charged with an Information with using botnets to send a high volume of traffic to intended recipients to cause damage by impairing the availability of such systems. (FBI Detroit); and

    * Robert Alan Soloway of Seattle, Washington, is alleged to have used a large botnet network and spammed tens of millions of unsolicited email messages to advertise his website from which he offered services and products. (FBI Seattle)

The FBI will continue to aggressively investigate individuals that conduct cyber criminal acts.

    Washington D.C.
    FBI National Press Office
    (202) 324-3691

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Vancouver: Center Of Domain Universe?

Domain Name News Bytes - June 11, 2007
By Editor
It's a good question: Kevin Ham, Yun Ye, Communicate.com Inc. Even Frank Schilling lived their before retreating to the warmer climate of the Cayman Islands. Incidentally, domain registrar Dotster is located in the city of Vancouver...but ...
Domain Name Wire -
http://domainnamewire.com

Search Month: May 2007 Search News, In Review
It starts off with a profile of Vancouver entrepreneur Kevin Ham ("The Man Who Owns the Internet"), who operates a $300 million domain "empire" but goes on to discuss others who have become wealthy from domain speculation, ...
Search Month: Search News In Review -
http://searchengineland.com/

Does Your Product Name Pass the Typing Test?
By William Lozito
Before buying a domain name at auction, "dotcom mogul" Kevin Ham checks it against an imaginary keyboard by "air-typing." He's looking for names that people will type into their browser's address bar directly. ...
Name Wire: The Product Naming Blog -
http://www.namedevelopment.com/blog/

Dotster Launches Redesigned Web Site
HostingTech.com - Leawood,KS,USA
Dotster, Inc. (dotster.com), an ICANN-accredited domain registration and web hosting companies, announced it has redesigned its Web site to improve navigation ...

dotMobi extends trademark registration
United Press International - USA
"The extension of the Trademark Registration period to ... holders with additional and much needed time to decide upon and organize their domain name applications ...

Web Host and Domain Registrar, RegisterFly, Premieres Domain ...
Cheap Web Hosting Directory - South Pasadena,CA,USA
... Its core product offerings include domain name registration, web-hosting, SSL certificates, e-mail service, site-builder services, Whois privacy protection and ...

Project promotes firms to go online
Shanghai Daily - Shanghai,China
The CNNIC launched a program called "Project Growth" at the end of June which offers a suite of options including domain registration support, Website building ...


Ebay Auction Search Made Simple
http://www.ebayAuctionAds.com

Parking Page Become A "Premier Destination"

 
Announcing the Launch of Virtulawyer.com, The New Legal Directory Resource

Virtulawyer.com will certainly deliver effective legal solutions to all consumers, say its creators. From simple legal matters to the most complex and difficult cases, consumers can rely on the site to guide them through all of their legal needs. With hundreds of lawyers listed on the site, virtulawyer offers seamless service across practice areas, no matter where clients reside.

(PRWEB) June 12, 2007 -- Virtulawyer.com is a new, free legal-information resource for ordinary people seeking information on legal issues and controversies.

This is a premier destination for legal news and information, with listings of attorneys specializing in all areas of the law throughout the country. Virtulawyer.com boasts a sleek sexy look and increased functionality, and promises consumers everything legal.

The listed lawyers offer experience across industries and strengthen all legal services. The site features functions such as lawyer referral, accident lawyers, bankruptcy lawyers,
family lawyers and reliable criminal and business lawyers just to name a few.
Virtulawyer now connects readers to state-specific legal resources with its handy Legal Websites in all States.

Virtulawyer is also home to lawyers who focus on mergers and acquisitions, finance, securities, private equity, outsourcing, tax, privatizations, antitrust, labor and employment. All attorneys on Virtulawyer have extensive experience serving clients, from individuals to multinational
telecommunications and information technology companies, and give every client the legal representation that they deserve, regardless of how big or small.

Additional Information on virtulawyer is related, but not limited to, many general legal terms and subjects, such as employment discrimination, affirmative action, adoption laws, immigration law, probates, and wills just to name a few.

" Virtulawyer.com will provide consumers with a directory of legal resources, in all aspects of the law, which gives one the opportunity to choose a lawyer that 'stands out' to them." Said Janice M. of Virtulawyer.com

##=#

Press Contact: Janice M
Company Name:
Phone: 304-322-6040
Website:
virtulawyer.com


Save on International calling to over 130 countries:
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Monday, June 11, 2007

Angels.com Owner Gets To Retain Ownership

National Arbitration Forum Issues Three Decisions on Internet Domain Name Disputes

Trademarks: Disney, Jimmy Buffett and Angels

MINNEAPOLIS, May 23, 2007 - The National Arbitration Forum recently issued decisions on three separate domain name disputes filed by Disney, Jimmy Buffett and Angels Baseball.

"We continue to see a trend towards filing complaints under the UDRP, rather than lawsuits, for these Internet conflicts," said Kristine Dorrain, Internet Legal Counsel of the National Arbitration Forum. "We're on the way to surpassing last year's record-breaking domain name filings." In 2006, the National Arbitration Forum saw its largest filing year ever, marking a 21% increase over 2005.

The following three decisions were made in accordance with the Uniform Domain Name Dispute Resolution Policy (UDRP) of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) by independent and neutral arbitrators on the National Arbitration Forum's panel.

DisneyComics.com
One of the world's largest entertainment corporations, Disney Enterprises, Inc., submitted a complaint electronically on February 15, 2007. The National Arbitration Forum panel found that the domain name DisneyComics.com was being cybersquatted by Dayanand Kamble of India who used the website to offer advertising links and products, some related to Disney's trademarks.

The panel found that the domain name was confusingly similar to the DISNEY mark. In addition, the respondent used the website for commercial gain and therefore had no legitimate rights in it. Furthermore, DisneyComics.com was registered and being used in bad faith by the respondent who took advantage of the confusing similarity between the disputed domain name and Disney's famous mark. Because the complainant proved all three elements required of the ICANN Policy, the request to transfer DisneyComics.com to Disney Enterprises, Inc. was granted on March 27, 2007.

JimmyBuffettUniversity.com
On February 22, 2007, Margaritaville Enterprises, LLC, controlled by popular singer Jimmy Buffett, submitted a complaint electronically with the National Arbitration Forum asserting legal rights to the domain names BuffettUniversity.com, JBuffett.com, JimmyBuffettUniversity.com and UniversityOfBuffett.com.

The panel concluded that the Jimmy Buffett-themed domain names were identical or confusingly similar to the registered trademark JIMMY BUFFETT. Furthermore, the respondent and registered owner Whapp Innovations, Inc. was using the domain names to operate pay-per-click websites and thusly for commercial gain. It was clear to the panel that the respondent had no rights or legitimate interests in the domain names and had registered and used them in bad faith. On April 2, 2007, the panel found that the complainant had established all three elements required under the ICANN Policy and had defended successfully its trademark in domain name dispute resolution. The four domain names were ordered to be transferred to Jimmy Buffett.

Angels.com
On February 26, 2007, the Los Angeles Major League Baseball team, Angels Baseball, filed a complaint electronically with the National Arbitration Forum against Lee Dongyeon, the registered owner of Angels.com. The respondent, of Korea, requested the dispute be decided by a three-member panel.

The panel found that Angels.com was identical to the complainant's ANGELS trademark. However, it was found that the Respondent had registered the ANGELS mark in Korea without any opposition from the American baseball team. Because the respondent has trademark rights in the domain name, Angels Baseball failed to prove this element. Finally, the panel found that the respondent may not have known of complainant and therefore did not register Angels.com in bad faith. Although the baseball team uses ANGELS as a trademark, it failed to prove two of three elements required under the ICANN policy to transfer a domain name. The panel denied the transfer of Angels.com to Angels Baseball on May 14, 2007.

About the National Arbitration Forum
The National Arbitration Forum, an industry leader in arbitration and mediation services for over 20 years, is an expert in the resolution of Internet-based disputes. An innovator in the industry, the National Arbitration Forum serves as one of three primary providers of the ICANN domain name dispute resolution program, resolving issues involving disputed trademarks. Over 8,000 intellectual property cases have been filed through the National Arbitration Forum's state-of-the-art case management system. For more information, visit
http://www.adrforum.com/.

For more information:
Domain Name Dispute Resolution Fact Sheet, Searchable Case Database, Disney Enterprises, Inc. v. Dayanand Kamble Decision, Margaritaville Enterprises, LLC v. Whapp Innovations Decision, or Angels Baseball, L.P. v. Lee Dongyeon Decision.

Media Contact:
Christina Doucet
media@adrforum.com
Phone: 952-516-6486

Friday, June 08, 2007

India's IN Domains reaches 200,000 registrations

More than Two Lakh Names Registered with 'in' Domain

NEW DELHI , INDIA - 5 November 2006 -National Internet Exchange of India (NIXI) and Afilias India Private Limited announced that the '.in' domain has reached 2,00,000 registrations, nearly doubling its presence in the market place since last year.  The .IN registry has grown to nearly 30 times the initial size of approximately 6500 domains prior to the January 2005 re-launch. The re-launch included a more competitive price, expanded eligibility, a state of the art technology platform, and broader distribution through the global registrar network.

While India rated 63 per cent in the usage of '.in' domain name 37 per cent were registered outside Indian soil.  Over 150  countries are represented by '.in' domain owners. The most popular countries are India, US, and Germany, which together account for over 81 percent of registrations, followed by the United Kingdom, The Netherlands, Japan, South Korea, Canada, Switzerland and Italy.

Expressing his happiness over the significant increase, Shri Dayanidhi Maran, Minister of Communications & Information Technology said,   "This is an important milestone in the 10 Point Agenda for India I introduced in 2004, as '.in' is now firmly established as a leading country code domain and reflects India's leadership in technology and the Internet". Shri Maran further said that the Government would shortly introduce the registration of '.in' domains in native Indian languages, beginning with Tamil and Malayalam Since '.in' is unrestricted, organizations and individuals across India can now reach their audience with an Internet address that proudly proclaims their Indian affinity. NIXI has brought a greater market focus to '.in' and has helped to proliferate the Internet in India.  All Indians on the Internet should get their '.in' now while great names are still available.

"We are proud to support .IN" said Ram Mohan, Director of Afilias India, who provides technical support to the .IN domain.     As regards Afilias,  it is  a fully integrated global provider of domain name registry services, maintains international headquarters in Dublin, Ireland, sales offices in London, England, sales and operational facilities in Toronto, administrative offices in the U.S. near Philadelphia, PA, and operational offices in New Delhi, India. Afilias provides a full range of registry services leveraging proven technology that is fast, reliable and secure.

It may be recalled that the Department of Information Technology (DIT) and National Internet Exchange of India (NIXI) took the initiative of setting up of the state-of-the art, hardware and software and re-launched the '.in' Registry.   The entire process of registration is available online.   The opening of the '.in' Registry has significantly improved and  broadened the availability of the domain names.

Internet Domain Names worldwide have assumed greater significance in recent times with the Internet increasingly being used as an effective medium for communication, governance, education and commerce.  The system of registration of Internet Domain Names can facilitate the proliferation of Internet in a country.  Many countries have, therefore, adopted liberal and market friendly policies to register large number of Domain Names under their country code, broadly consistent with globally accepted policy and procedures of Domain registration.


My question is, does Kevin Ham own any .in domains...?
(hris

Domain Investment Empire

Kevin Ham $300 million Domain Investment Empire
By Jay Jason
Business 2.0 run a story on Kevin Ham. It talks about how this trained family doctor started investing in domain names and built a $300 million empire.
Investing Mag - http://www.investingmag.com/kevin-ham-domain-investment/10/

Kevin Ham: Master Of Our Domains
By (hris
If You Can't Find A Domain Name, Kevin Ham May Have It By (hris Following the recent discussions around the purchase of jobs.com.au and the resulting owner I was very interested to read about the activities of Kevin Ham king ping ...
Non-Commercial Email -
http://www.ncemail.com/index.htm

Signs of the Times...
By Frank Schilling
1.
http://www.domainersclub.com/ -- An Oktoberfest party and binge drinking opportunity for an exclusive club of domainers (channeling an image of Yun Ye and I in matching beer-bong helmets). 2. http://www.kevinham.ws/ -- A Kevin Ham fan site where the site's own foundational URL is 'for sale' ..
Seven Mile -
http://frankschilling.typepad.com/my_weblog/2007/06/signs_of_the_ti.html

The man who owns the Internet
CNNMoney.com - USA
He's nearly as reluctant to share details about his newest company, called Reinvent Technology, into which he's investing tens of millions of dollars to ...
money.cnn.com/magazines/business2/business2_archive/2007/06/01/100050989/?postversion=2007052205

Domain Name Business Red Hot again
I4U - May 23, 2007
Mr. Kevin Ham is one of them and makes an estimated $70 million in revenue per year. He owns over 300000 domain names and also does things like serving ads ...
http://www.i4u.com/article9082.html

Yahoo Outsmarts Google in Cameroon Domain Play
Business 2.0, CA - May 22, 2007
In the June cover story of Business2.0, The Man Who Owns The Internet, I write about how a domainer named Kevin Ham struck a deal with the government of ...
blogs.business2.com/sloan/2007/05/yahoo_outsmarts.html

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Domain Name Brokers Battle

 
Battle of the Brokers

Eight players dominate the domain name aftermarket

Davis, CA (PRWEB) June 6, 2007 -- While private sales account for the vast majority of the US$111 million domain resale market (more than 24 percent), eight exchanges or brokers compete for dominance while domain valuations skyrocket.

"Private transactions are where most of the big deals take place," Zetetic Senior Analyst Keith Pieper said. "But the market has gotten very lucrative with a dominant four holding companies accounting for nearly 46 percent of all transactions."

Combining the Afternic acquisition with BuyDomains, NameMedia is now a leading player in this space. In sheer volume, the domain name exchange market is lead by NameMedia, SEDO then GoDaddy, the only players managing over 1,000 transactions in 2006.

On a transaction level, Moniker leads this group with an average transaction value of US$45,308, followed by SEDO at US$7,180, NameMedia at US$1,845 and GoDaddy at US$822. The chart enclosed breaks down the leading eight exchanges and the trackable private market, for comparison.

Clearly, GDNX and Afternic's Bazaar are the liquidation outlets for anyone wanting to sell or buy a domain name for cheap. SEDO, BuyDomains and Afternic all compete for the middle tier of valued names with averages closer to the overall market average of US$5,582 in 2006.

However, quantity does not always yield quality. In addition to having the highest average sale prices, private transactions typically have some of the highest quality names as well, often with the shortest character lengths, highest number of incoming links, highest cash flow multiples, daily visitor counts and keyword popularity. However, GoDaddy domain names on average had the highest number of incoming Alexa links while SEDO domain names had the highest number of incoming Yahoo links on average. Domain names sold through Domain Cargo have the highest score for English Written and Spoken popularity while domain names sold through Moniker had the highest internet keyword popularity of the leading brokers. In general, Google Page Ranks are quite low in the resale market, with most exchanges averaging a one out of ten.

A free metrics table summarizing the various averages and scores of each broker is available FREE for a limited time to anyone purchasing a domain name appraisal at http://www.Zetetic.com

Methodology
The data above represents aftermarket or broker exchanges and not "dropped" or "expired" domain registries such as SnapNames. The data is only from transactions that took place in 2006. Visit Zetetic.com for more about Zetetic's research and data collection methodologies. While Zetetic makes every effort to collect and track the private market, it is commonly estimated that the private marketplace accounts for more than 80 percent of all domain name resale transactions, most of which are not revealed publicly. As a result, the "private" transactions listed above are only listed for directional purposes.

About Zetetic:
Zetetic is an independent domain name research company providing appraisal and analytical services to domain name registrars, brokers, owners, buyers, sellers, speculators and aggregators. Zetetic has aggregated over 39,000 domain sale transactions across over 100 sources since 2003 and has a historical database reaching back to 1996. Zetetic now adds nearly 2,000 additional transactions to it's database each month. Zetetic currently uses this information to provide domain name appraisals directly to domain name owners, buyers and affiliate resale partners using algorithmic and analyst appraisal methodologies.

For more information, please contact Zetetic at 1-877-ZETETIC or visit http://www.Zetetic.com

#?##

Press Contact: KEITH PIEPER
Company Name: Zetetic
Phone: 877-938-3842
Website:
http://www.zetetic.com

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

If You Can't Find A Domain Name, Kevin Ham May Have It

Can't find a domain name, Kevin Ham has it
By Michael Specht
Following the recent discussions around the purchase of jobs.com.au and the resulting owner I was very interested to read about the activities of Kevin Ham king ping domainer. Trained as a family doctor, he put off medicine after ...
Michael Specht - discussions... -
http://www.specht.com.au/michael

The Man Who Took Every Good Domain Name And His $300 Million Empire
The culprit is the infamous domainer named Kevin Ham. Like every other domainer, he though of many different domain names and "parked" these on servers showing advertisements. For instance, he grabbed up weddingshoes.com and loaded
*Jozzua -
http://www.jozzua.com

Have I got a Domain Name for you!
By Paul Sloan
Kevin_ham03_2 I've received tons of email in response to my Business2.0 cover piece about Kevin Ham in the current issue. Not surprisingly, a lot of people want to reach Ham. Some even included domain names they're looking to sell.
The Key -
http://blogs.business2.com/sloan/

Domain Name Errors A Good Thing?
By (hris ((hris)
I'm looking for some valuable domains now - and fresh off of the newest issue of Business 2.0 that has an amazing article on Kevin Ham (the $300 million dollar dot com mogul), I think that I'm going to dabble into the domain aftermarket
Deleted and Expired Domains -
http://www.bizprolink-internet.com/blog/index.htm

New Projects and Blogs
By Krunk
The man who owns the Internet - Kevin Ham is the most powerful dotcom mogul you've never heard of, reports Business 2.0 Magazine. Here's how the master of Web domains built a $300 million empire. Online Savings from Washington Mutual
Krunk4Ever! -
http://www.krunk4ever.com/blog

Agoga.com plus Cameroon plus Misspellings equals Big Shady Business
By Anthony
Upon further investigation, I found that the mastermind behind the Agoga.com domain name is a Canadian resident named Kevin Ham, a famous domain squatter. It appears that he has made a business arrangement with the Cameroon nation to ...
Tap Tech Blog -
http://www.go2tap.com

Kevin Ham Fan Blog Launched

Sunday, June 03, 2007

Domain Name Errors A Good Thing?

Cybersquatter strikes gold with typos
Edmonton Journal (subscription) - Edmonton,Alberta,Canada
Kevin Ham, a 37-year-old Vancouver-based businessman who has made millions staking claims to popular Internet domain names, is profiled in the June cover ...

The Future Foretold - pt. 1 of 2
By me
I'm looking for some valuable domains now - and fresh off of the newest issue of Business 2.0 that has an amazing article on Kevin Ham (the $300 million dollar dot com mogul), I think that I'm going to dabble into the domain aftermarket ...
Bryan Le. The Daily Dose -
http://bryanle.net

How to make a LOT of money without really doing anything
By PelaLusa(PelaLusa)
In his latest venture, Vancouverite Kevin Ham makes money every time someone misspells a ".com" website address as ".cm". I've never done this, but apparently lots of people do. So if instead of typing "www.microsoft.com" you instead
PelaLusa -
http://pelalusa.blogspot.com/

What Would Jesus Do.com
DealBreaker.Com, NY - May 22, 2007
Kevin Ham is one of the world's most successful "domainers," or people who have profited from buying up internet domain names. ...
http%3A//www.dealbreaker.com/2007/05/what_would_jesus_docom.php&cid=0

Globe and Mail Is there something in the water?
Globe and Mail, Canada - May 23, 2007
Business 2.0 magazine has a great piece in its latest issue about Kevin Ham, one of the world's top "domainers" -- Web profiteers who try to lock up domain ...
http%3A//www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20070523.WBmingram20070523124623/WBStory/WBmingram&cid=0

Direct Navigation and Domain Empires
Search Engine Land, CT - May 23, 2007
It starts off with a profile of Vancouver entrepreneur Kevin Ham ("The Man Who Owns the Internet"), who operates a $300 million domain "empire" but goes on ...

Domain Name Business Red Hot again
I4U - May 23, 2007
Mr. Kevin Ham is one of them and makes an estimated $70 million in revenue per year. He owns over 300000 domain names and also does things like serving ads
http%3A//www.i4u.com/article9082.html&cid=0

Yahoo Outsmarts Google in Cameroon Domain Play
Business 2.0, CA - May 22, 2007
In the June cover story of Business2.0, The Man Who Owns The Internet, I write about how a domainer named Kevin Ham struck a deal with the government of ...

Kevin Ham: The $300 Million Domain Man
The man behind hitfarm is the topic of a cnn story kevin ham: the $300 million domain man.
www.webmasterworld.com/domain_names/3346487.htm

Kevin Ham: Blogs, Photos, Videos and more on Technorati
Everything in the known universe about Kevin Ham. Featured; Posts · Blogs · Videos · Photos · Music · Events. From Blogs. Blog posts
technorati.com/tag/Kevin+Ham

Kevin Ham on Business 2.0 » DomainTools Blog
Kevin Ham It is an extremely rare case when Business 2.0 puts an anonymous unknown person on the cover, but the editor just did it for the month of June
blog.domaintools.com/2007/05/kevin-ham-on-business-2/

KevinHam.com Kevin Ham
2005-08-17. Kevin Ham.com, 2005-12-13. Kevin Hamilton Creative. 2005-12-21. Kevin Hamilton Images.com, 2005-12-21. Kevin Hamilton Studio.com, 2005-12-21
whois.domaintools.com/kevinham.com

WIPO Domain Name Decision: D2001-0992
On June 14, 2001, another representative of the Complainant, Francis Cronjé telephoned the Respondent and spoke to Dr. Kevin Ham of the Respondent with a
www.wipo.int/amc/en/domains/decisions/html/2001/d2001-0992.html

Canada Domain Whois Lookup - DOMAINScanada.ca
Administrator's Name, Kevin Ham. Administrator's Title. Administrator's Phone #, 604-601-8430 ... Technical Contact Name, Kevin Ham. Technical Contact Title
www.domainscanada.ca/whois.php?domain=calgaryjobsearch.ca

Federated Media / Tech: Kevin Ham: Master of His Domain
Recent Posts from Gadgetopia. Kevin Ham: Master of His Domain. (And maybe yours.) Kevin Ham, the $300 million master of Web domains: Wow. When Ham
www.federatedmedia.net/tech/2007/05/kevin_ham_master_of_his_domain.php

MediaPost Publications - Kevin Ham: The Domain Game Baron - 05/23/2007
Kevin Ham is the most powerful dot-com mogul you've never heard of. He is a master of the game that Google vowed recently to clean up: Ham buys domain names
publications.mediapost.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=Articles.showArticleHomePage&art_aid=60844

High End Web Names Blog
That is why Kevin Ham from Reinvent Technology has helped Cameroon monetize Kevin Ham does not belong to this group of people, although I see where some
www.highendwebnames.com/blog/

» Business 2.0 Cover Story on Kevin Ham/Reinvent (DomainEditorial.com)
Business 2.0's latest cover story "Kevin Ham, The man who owns the internet" by Paul Sloan is out today. The article tells the story of how Kevin build his empire
www.domaineditorial.com/archives/2007/05/22/business-20-cover-story-on-kevin-hamreinvent/

Kevin Ham Fan Club

Saturday, June 02, 2007

.Aero Domain Set To Take Off

Aero-domain: it's all in the name

The web address nafa.aero provides a case book example of the benefits of using the aero-domain as a means of providing the essential differential among domains.

06-01-2007 - Press release from: Secura GmbH - The National Aircraft Finance Association, NAFA, is a US-based non-profit corporation dedicated to promoting the general welfare of individuals and organizations providing aircraft financing and loans secured by aircraft; to improve the industry's service to the public; to work with government agencies to foster a greater understanding of our member's needs.

The Association provides a case book example of the benefits of using the aero- domain as a means of providing the essential differential among domains. The lottery of who got the name first can be particularly difficult for associations - which may end up with initials that identify it clearly within its own sector of interest, but which may also duplicate the initials of an organization in a completely different sector.

In pre-Internet days, that did not present a problem. For example, those involved in financing general aircraft were unlikely to be involved with a body involved in "teaching artists the fine art of making art" or with an association for those involved in managing fleets of cars, trucks and vans. But unique means unique within the Internet and all those groups use the initials "NAFA". So the art group took nafa.com (first registered 1994) and the fleet management association took nafa.org (first registered 1995), while the National Aircraft Finance Association took nafa-us.org (first registered 1999).

Today type "NAFA" into Google and the first page comes up with a whole range of organizations using these initials, as well as those already mentioned. They include the North American Flyball Association (flyball.org), the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts (nafa.edu.sg), North American Fur Auctions (nafa.ca), and the North American Falconers Association (n-a-f-a.org).

Not surprisingly, NAFA decided to remove itself from the web noise, focusing its Internet naming policy exclusively at its core business - the air transport community.

"Adopting the aero-domains was an obvious choice for us," according to NAFA Treasurer and Executive Director Karen Griggs. "There are 83 million domain names worldwide and 46 percent of those are .com. No wonder there can be confusion. Our business is specific - it's of no interest to the vast majority of those using the Internet. But those who do deal with us need predictability - and we need security. Adopting the .aero domain has yielded both. Our members and stakeholders know where they can find us. And that's what counts."

NAFA's membership and associate membership of some 120 companies are all leaders in helping buyers, sellers and finance companies within the aircraft transaction process. The organization also provides members with a forum for both education and the sharing of information and knowledge - all directed at encouraging the financing, leasing and insuring of general aviation aircraft.

Hans-Peter Oswald
https://www.domainregistry.de/aero-domain.html

Secura is accredited at ICANN for all generic Top Level Domains. Secura can register all generic top level domains and all active country domains

Secura GmbH
Am Alten Posthof 4-6
D-50667 Koeln
secura@domainregistry.de
http://www.domainregistry.de
Tel. 49 221 2571213
Fax 49 221 9252272
ICANN accredited registrar
of Top Level Domains

Chinese .CN Domain Guide

Short guide to chinese cn-domains

The cn-domain is the country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for the People's Republic of China.

06-01-2007 - Press release from: Secura GmbH - Like most countries, people can register for second-level domain names, e.g.mercedes.cn. However, there are preset ones for certain types of organizations and geographic locations. The third-level registrations at cn-domains were available before second-level registrations became available in 2004, and third-level registrants were given first shot at getting their name at the second level when this was opened up.

Generic second-level domains

.ac.cn : Academic or scientific research institutions
.com.cn : Commercial
.edu.cn : Educational institutions
.gov.cn : Government agencies
.net.cn : Internet oriented organizations
.org.cn : Organizations

Foreign companies register usually at .cn and com.cn, also at .net.cn and .org.cn. The com.cn extension is in China still more popular than the cn-extension. A prudent company registers thereofore at .cn, .com.cn, .net.cn and .org.cn.

Domain names with Chinese characters may also be registered at the second level under the .cn top-level domain.

The Registry of cn-domains has made available cn-domains for each of the Chinese provinces. These domain name extensions, like .com.cn and .cn, are completely unrestricted and open to anyone.

China has one of the largest growing Internet populations. As of June 2004, there were over 94 million internet users. With such high popularity, and in conjunction with some of the infringement we have already seen, it may be prudent to consider securing top mark(s) in these extensions.

- .ah.cn Anhui Province
- .bj.cn Shanghai
- .cq.cn Chongqing Province
- .fj.cn Fujian Province
- .gd.cn Zhejiang Province .zj.cn
- .gs.cn Gansu Province
- .gx.cn Guangxi Province
- .gz.cn Guizhou Province
- .ha.cn Henan Province
- .hb.cn Hubei Province
- .he.cn Hebei Province
- .hi.cn Hainan Province
- .hk.cn Xianggang Province
- .hl.cn Heilongjiang Province
- .hn.cn Hunan Province
- .jl.cn Jilin Province
- .js.cn Jiangsu Province
- .jx.cn Jiangxi Province
- .ln.cn Liaoning Province
- .mo.cn Aomen Province
- .nm.cn Neimeng Province
- .nx.cn Ningxia Province
- .qh.cn Qinghai Province
- .sc.cn Sichuan Province
- .sd.cn Shandong Province
- .sh.cn Shanghai
- .sn.cn Shanxi Province
- .sx.cn Shanxi Province
- .tj.cn Tianjin
- .tw.cn Taiwan Province
- .xj.cn Xinjiang Province
- .xz.cn Xizang Province
- .yn.cn Yunnan Province
- .zj.cn Zhejiang Province

Hans-Peter Oswald
https://www.domainregistry.de/cn-domain.html

Secura is accredited at ICANN for all generic Top Level Domains. Secura can register all generic top level domains and all active country domains

Secura GmbH
Am Alten Posthof 4-6
D-50667 Koeln
secura@domainregistry.de
http://www.domainregistry.de
Tel. 49 221 2571213
Fax 49 221 9252272
ICANN accredited registrar
of Top Level Domains


.MD Domains Are Perfect Web Addresses For Medical Professionals And Healthcare Companies

Why to register md-domains

Blog Press Release
Press Release from:
Secura GmbH

2007/06/01 - What is a md-domain? The md-domain is the web address that identifies you, your company or your organization with the healthcare industry. Thousands of professionals and companies in the healthcare industry are already utilizing md-domains for their branding and marketing efforts, including some of the world's largest pharmaceutical companies. The md-domain is a valuable and unique asset that can be used as an intuitive and dynamic communication tool. The md-domains are the perfect web address for medical professionals and healthcare companies. The md-domain is a permanent professional

ICANN Registrar Secura: Fast and reliable registration of md-domains
address and it is a dynamic communication tool and distribution channel for participants in the healthcare community.The md-domains may be used to protect your brands and trademarks to prevent international cyber-squatters from purchasing yourdomain names and using them for other purposes.The md-domain may be used as a unique, intuitive, and available promotional tool to market prescription and OTC drugs

ICANN accredited Registrar Secura is developing an Internet domain for the global healthcare community where participants in the healthcare sector can acquire valuable md-domains that correlate precisely with the marketing of their core business practices andnew products .The md-domain permits corporations and individuals to establish a unique Internet presence that carries an automatic, intuitive association with healthcare and other medical services and applications.

Since becoming operational, there has been significant interest in the md-domain. The wide adoption of the md-domains, prior to launching a formal .mdmarketing campaign confirms the need and desire for a top level healthcare centric domain. The number of md-domainsregistrations continues to grow exponentially with this exposure.

The leading adopters in the .md registry are: ·
-Physicians
-Medical Schools
-Private Practices
-Health Clinics
-Drug Development Companies
-Pharmaceutical Companies-
-Health Insurance Companies
-Medical Laboratories

Additionally, Fortune 1000 companies have adopted the md-domain as part of their global brand marketing strategy.

Hans Peter Oswald
https://www.domainregistry.de/md-domain.html