I managed to get seliaste.com for pretty cheap, idk if I got lucky
Comment on Why do so many Lemmy instances use weird TLDs?
skullgiver@popplesburger.hilciferous.nl 1 year ago
They’re available. Almost everything that resembles a word in .com has been registered for ten years now. Unless you want servers like EruptWiryReptilianGetting.com or tHEEGsg6VzJRTik8.com, you’ll need alternative TLDs for affordable names that still make sense.
seliaste@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 year ago
driving_crooner@lemmy.eco.br 1 year ago
How much this fucked up people hoarding interesting urls like menu.com and others?
HakFoo@lemmy.sdf.org 1 year ago
There is an entire industry “domaining” that trades domain names like baseball cards. It usually boils down to two things:
People register pdrq.com because they hope someone will have a wonderful new product named PDRQ later and will pay $10,000 for a domain that cost them $11.
Even if there’s no direct buyer, there are services that will run low-quality ads on the page. and you can more or less estimate traffic and revenue from typos or dead links pointing to the domain. A three character domain, all letters, will get more than 12 characters with random digits mixed in. If you get $12 a year of random clicks seeing ads for “hot singles in your area offering PDRQ”, you’re ahead and can justify holding it as part of a portfolio.
loobkoob@kbin.social 1 year ago
Which really illustrates how much of a bubble waiting to burst online advertising is. Ads on pages like those don't translate into any real-world value for anyone. The advertisers are paying out but they're not actually gaining any sales/users for their money at all because no-one is mistyping a website name, then clicking an advert on the crappy-looking page that comes up, and then deciding to buy/use a product/service from that advert.
___@lemmy.ca 1 year ago
Based on my discussions with some domainers I’ve met, the ads themselves haven’t been profitable for the past 5+ years. Their renewals are done at a loss until they make a sale, which covers a few year’s worth of renewals on all their domains. It’s not as profitable as it used to be with all the new gTLDs out there