The Secundary Domain Market is a Giant Ponzi Scheme Pyramid

Posted by k | Posted in Black Hat, Finding Good Domains, IDNs, Make Money, Registering New Domains | Posted on 10-02-2010

Unless you’re an investor on top keywords domains, like sex.com, business.com or any great one word keyword dot com, with true marketable value and decent type in revenue, this post is for you: this means 95% of all domainers out there. So, why are you on a Giant Ponzi Scheme Pyramid?

  • 1.You’re buying air based on fantastic future promises
  • 2.You get in lured by the successful stories of others
  • 3.You’re fattening the ones on the top of the pyramid
  • 4.You can’t easily get out. (Liquidity trap: You can’t sell your portfolio at any time for the same value you get it)
  • 5.You try to get new blood to the pyramid convincing your friends how great the domain business is
  • 6.You end up selling air to others to cover your losses (And you might even enjoy doing it and keep going)
  • 7.You keep dreaming of being as rich as the religious mentor sitting on the top of your pyramid

Sounds familiar right?! This Domain Market Giant Ponzi Scheme main idea is to squeeze money from newcomers. Every new “revolutionary” platform serves only to better achieve this purpose. Firstly to the owners of those platforms, next to their friends and relatives and finally, while and if the scam is still convincing, to their network of interests.

Take for instance BIDO, don’t you ever think: “why are they listing this crappie name and constantly refuse to list mine’s”? Domainfest, Mardigrass, or the last platform everyone is blogging about: bargaindomains.com. The idea is to sell domains with huge discounts, like 90% off and even more. Excuse me, but, 90% off of what? 90% off of ESTIBOT valuations. Everyone knows ESTIBOT valuations suck big time, except newbies, of course. Another great example is eBay, being the latest trend there to sell IDN domains that look like English domains. That’s the ultimate fraud, I tell you. Just go to eBay and search for “IDN”.

Joel Comm recently spoke out the real truth about internet marketing:

My associate and I were stunned when the promoter told us that the attendees to his event were always looking for the next big thing and that it was like he was selling crack to them… providing their next fix. He made it clear that he didn’t expect them ever to make any money and he was fine with that

This is exactly what the top gurus of our industry think about you, yes YOU. Behind closed doors on those famous conferences. I bet one day we’ll have our “Joel Comm” revelation.

Therefore my advice is: when you buy a domain name, any name, for more than reg fee, you’re being swindled. You can buy a “great” name for $100 and never, ever on your life be able to sell it again. In the meanwhile, you will be supporting ICANN investments on the stock market and Bob Parsons’s Playboy girls, with the reg fees you’ll be adding every year.

Don’t buy the domain names are like virtual real state bullshit. Would you pay billions to own “Pittsburg” (Real Estate) if you could own “PittsburgAB” for $8, and construct exactly the same house (website) and have almost the same number of people visiting? (Same Rank on Google) I know, I know exact domain match is a big plus, but my point is that IT CAN be done!

Buying .com domains was a great investment to enter, in 1996. Buying IDN domains was a great investment to get in, in 2001. .mobi or .me domains were great investments to get in, if you were a partner on the company launching them. If you let those times go, don’t go chasing ghosts, and don’t buy the crap talk.

So, why am I domainer, you may ask. Go read this blog’s title: Black Hat Domainer. Keep tuning in, as I’ll be posting next how you should successfully ride this highly distorted domain market tide. Highly distorted markets are markets were you can profit a lot, if you know how to properly do it. The level of distortion is proportional to the number of people who have real awareness of its distortion. Welcome to the other side. Most top domainers are black hats. Halvarez rings a bell?

Still more freebies

Posted by k | Posted in Finding Good Domains, Registering New Domains | Posted on 09-02-2009

€1 .com domains here: http://www.united-domains.de (IDNs also)

Free WP blog ON your domain here: https://panel.dreamhostapps.com/signup

No more excuses for not making money online. Hurry up, limited time and/or slots available.

Note: No affiliate bullshit links, just plain text clean links.

Some freebies

Posted by k | Posted in Black Hat, Registering New Domains | Posted on 29-01-2009

You have two days to register .es (spanish tld) domains at $1 each (pay with dollars) on Gandi.net, no strings attached. Don’t forget it’s also valid for idn.es domains.

You can get a free domain on Register using this link. Not sure about the strings attached on this one.

And now comes the Black Hat part: how about a nice free .edu wp blog just for you to have fun?

Stop words on Domains

Posted by k | Posted in Finding Good Domains, Registering New Domains, SEO | Posted on 21-02-2008

As you know, one of the most important factors when valuating a domain name is its ability to attract Google queries.

That’s why when trying to fresh register domains using top keywords lists from Overture (RIP), WordZe, WordTrack or any keyword tool, you’ll quickly find out they are all taken, including the most remote tlds! I can also assure you having a keyword.com is one hell of a giant leap over several months classic SEO hard work.

As Google algorithm evolves and changes, we domainers must keep our eyes wide open to new breaks that can surface just around the corner.

One of the best (and hard) ways to know (even beforehand) how Google algorithm will evolve is to read Google fillings for patents! I know, it’s stomach-churning, but someone has to do it.

One of the latest patents is about a new index method: US Patent 7,319,994, granted January 15, 2008. It’s named: Document compression scheme that supports searching and partial decompression.

In the end, what it refers to is a new, much faster way to index and search using a compressed index and partial decompression searches. There’s a paragraph specifically about stop words:

Typically, given a query, the performance bottleneck is the time it takes to decode the occurrences (which are typically delta encoded to save space, and thus have to be followed from the beginning) of the most frequently occurring term, especially if this term is a so-called stop-word such as “the”.

The new system would look for the less popular terms that appear in the query, and then look to see if the stop words in the query are nearby.

Is this already implemented? The answer is yes. You don’t see stop warnings anymore. Just try searching for The Great Game.

You know what you to do next: here’s a list of stop words in English and some other languages, and happy domain hunting!

The only thing that worries me is the fact Google does not highlights the “The” on theGreatDomain.com domain. Further tests will be made. Keep visiting…