4.11.2007

What does BIN mean?

If you are a visitor to the domain name forums you will see "BIN" mentioned in some of the threads. This refers to the "Buy It Now" price. If someone lists a domain name with offers starting at $200 and the BIN is set at $1,000 this means that you can buy the domain name at $1,000 without going through the offer-counter offer process.


www.whataredomains.com

4.08.2007

How to Use Domain Names to Make Money Online

When people take about topic related to making money online. They generally will mention Google AdSense program, affiliate programs, how to sell products and services through a website and ebay, paid survey and so on. But have you ever heard about making money online with domain names? It is a new concept to profit online and there is a number of people earn a living with domain names. So how domain names can make people money? Good question. Here's how:

Purchase Domain Name at Low Prices, then Resell Them at Higher Price
Do you know, companies, e-entrepreneurs and Internet marketers that want to make their websites popular and powerful are willing to pay a lot for a good domain name. So this created an opportunity to make money online. What you can do is register those good domain names earlier and then sell to them at higher price. But nowadays, it is getting harder to profit online with this method as more and more people have aware of this opportunity and started to do the same.

Fortunately, there is one solution: buying expired domain names. Everyday, thousand of domain names are being abandoned by their owners and become expired domain names. Some of the main reasons the owners don't re-register their domain names are they have closed their online businesses, they have lost interest in operating their websites and so on. Expired domain names reached certain periods will be deleted and available to anyone who wants to buy it. Among these expired domains, you can find some profitable domain names with existing traffic to resell for profit at auction sites like ebay.

Park Your Domain Name to Earn Advertising Revenue
If you have domain name left unused or waiting for development, you may consider parking them to domain parking websites to generate extra income for you. For less than $5 per month you can park a domain to a domain parking company. The company will build a parked page with links or content and sponsored ads on your domain name. You drive traffic to the domain name and earn advertising revenue such as AdSense commission. Here are two companies that offer domain parking service:

Parkedgold.com
Godaddy.com - Cash Parking Program

You can also buy an expired domain name that builds in with existing traffic and park it to domain parking company to generate advertising revenue. To determine whether an expired domain name still has traffic comes in, you may check the domain's link popularity. If the domain has many inbound links, it is very likely that the domain name have a steady stream of traffic built in. You can find expired domain from Godaddy's domain auction at https://www.tdnam.com. Another way is to use a paid domain name search tool of Expiredtraffic.com to find profitable expired domain.

Source
www.whataredomains.com

VeriSign raises charges to register '.com' and '.net' domain names

New York: The master-keeper of internet addresses ending in ".com" and ".net" - two of the most popular domain name suffixes - said on Thursday it would raise fees charged to register those names.

The annual levy for ".com" will increase seven per cent to $6.42, and the ".net" fee will go up 10 per cent to $3.85.

The per-name fees are what VeriSign collects from companies that sell domain names on its behalf, and such charges are generally incorporated in the prices companies, groups and individuals pay to register names.

With about 62 million ".com" names and 9.1 million ".net" names in use, VeriSign stands to ultimately make $29 million a year from the increase, which will take effect October 15.

However, the price hike applies only to new name registrations and renewals, and customers can lock in the old prices until October 14. Many brokers, known as registrars, offer multiyear deals for up to 10 years; Network Solutions, formerly owned by Veri-Sign, even offers a 100-year package.

VeriSign runs the Domain Name System computers that keep track of all the ".com" and ".net" names in use.

Computers from around the world check them continually to find out how to reach ".com" and ".net" websites and pass along e-mail.

The Mountain View, California-based company said the fee increases, the first since 1999, stem from a need to keep up with growing online use as well as threats from hackers.

"Over the last six years, VeriSign has dealt with two phenomenons when it came to the infrastructure," VeriSign spokesman Tom Galvin said.

He said VeriSign's DNS computers now get 30 billion queries a day, compared with one billion in 2000, while security exploits have grown eightfold over that period.

In February, the company announced Project Titan, an initiative to expand the capacity of its systems tenfold by 2010 - to four trillion queries a day. The extra capacity is needed to respond to any unusual surges from legitimate demand, as well as to overcome any denial-of-service attacks, in which hackers try to overwhelm the systems with fake traffic.

The price hike does not require any regulatory approval.




Source
www.whataredomains.com